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

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

The Port Hope saga

Uranium has a half life of a couple of hundred thousand years, about the same length of time that the citizens of Port Hope will debate the radiation issue. Unfortunately in Port Hope you are either fer or agin the subject of Crane/Eldorado/Cameco being good for the Town or being the cause of mutants. Now the poop has really hit the fan. A local committee of people convinced, in the face of the lack of evidence to the contrary, that the effects of low level radiation cause health defects in certain members of the population. They, the committee, have been trying to get a health study funded. The study would investigate the effects of radiation upon citizens. Unable to convince governments to fund any studies they raised enough money to test nine people. The results of this $11,000 study found that some of the nine carried more than normal amounts of uranium.

Unfortunately the committee made the mistake of releasing the results in Toronto instead of locally. Naturally all major media outlets were on this study with inflamed headlines and camera time much to the consternation of the majority of Port Hope who are convinced that the committee is composed of cranks and malcontents. Hades hath no fury like the scorn of a enraged population.

Community reaction has been to demonise the committee and the few connected with the report and a public petition has been started to "regain the good name of the community". But this bypasses the main issue here - Port Hope needs a community health scan, something that all levels of government refuse to perform.

The bottom line here is we should not condemn those who are convinced that Port Hopers are irradiated but governments should perform a health inspection to prove that they aren't

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Lest we forget

Lest we forget. How many times have we intoned those words on November 11th. Coming from a fourth generation military family, I was the only one who didn't make a career of it (much to my father's disgust) Remembrance Day is always a mix of pomp and pageantry for me.

This was only second time I have failed to attend the local ceremony in 22 years. But I will always remember the first parade I ever attended. Dressed in military khakis, I was nine years old, short trousers even, at the military school I attended. Greatcoats on and poppies on the lapel we formed up on what seemed to be the biggest patch of asphalt I have ever seen. Inspected by the School Commandant, shouted at by the senior boys who were the NCOs in charge, and marching to the school cenotaph, led by the contingent of "Old Boys", it rained, it always rained. After the usual prayers of remembrance we then marched to the chapel where under sets of dangling "colours" the usual Sunday service was conducted. So the pattern was set - next year I will try my hardest to attend, the local legion deserves nothing less than full attendance. The numbers on parade in Cobourg have obviously dwindled, so those able to march must. No excuses will be accepted next year.

We will remember them

Saturday, November 10, 2007

For those who come to the site and don't see a new post

It can be very frustrating to keep coming to a site where there are no regular postings just sporadic whims.

Change that by subscribing to the the Atom posts at the bottom of the page. You will be emailed a notification whenever the BurdReport changes. Click here for a demo and sign up page

The Cobourg Police Meeting

As you might have gathered from the tardy post about the meeting, it failed to impress. A disappointing turnout that consisted of police volunteers, communicators and serving officers. The usual dog and pony show took up the first hour and then Cobourg Councillor Frost delivered an insightful and cutting analysis of the report - said it was vague, confusing and based on grants and rebates that could disappear as easily as they were put into the report. Other Councillors asked questions: Mayor D asked a setup question and gave the usual political mantra that Policing costs are escalating far higher and faster than other line items in the budget and we must look at alternatives (not mentioned is his desire to get rid of competing rivals - all the Mayors dislike the Police Chiefs because they earn more than the CAO and have a competing public persona). Hey does he think that will stop when the OPP takes over? Their costs are now increasing at 4% per annum and rising too!

I must say that the dog and pony show is more polished after 5 meetings. The technique for rebuttal is to answer the questions they can, with answers of their choosing, not necessarily correct, and ignoring the ones they don't like. For example in Port Hope they (the County) answered and debated the issue of rebates. This time when the issue was raised, in Cobourg, and rebates were called "compensation for reduced service" they ignored the statements. This time the question of communicators moving into OPP jobs was answered with "There will be opportunities to move into the vacant jobs" Well how 51 trained communicators can move into 14 clerical keyboarding jobs seamlessly wasn't answered.

Also I must raise the issue of the Mayor of Trent Hills moving into our meeting and lecturing us about how great the OPP really ticked me off. Imagine what his reaction would be if we went to Campbellford and told him how to run the Campbellford Foundation. Hector you are not the Mayor of Northumberland yet, that comes in two years time when amalgamation is forced on us by angry taxpayers fed up with paying for duplication. The Police first, then the County Official Plan and then the regional water authority and Bill Pyatt can become the new emperor of the biggest bureaucracy in Northumberland. Stay in Trent Hills Hector!

The next stage in this melodrama will be the debate on the 19th at Cobourg Council. After the dog and pony shows we now know the real issue in this debate - the level of service. Cobourg has two options to discuss: the standalone OPP and the County integrated model. The dog and pony show discusses the integrated model. This is where we will have 130 officers policing the County and we only pay for 109 - what a bargain. Now we get to pay twice for the same level of service, the 109 through a rigged County levy and the rest through our Provincial taxes. So who really pays for what?

But as we know what Cobourg and Port Hope thinks is beside the point we are outvoted and killed off with our own money.


Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Why do we bother

Why do we bother? A question asked of me all the time, especially by the love of my life, she has been asking this all the time I have known her. I attempt to answer in many ways but is all came together when I received a letter, ccd to many of us by the writer, that was written to Lloyd Williams after he had penned a muse wherein he pondered why Councils of the days have become distant from their constituents. He came to the conclusion that people don't bother. The letter below answers that muse. The writer expresses the answer so well, it deserves a reprint.

"I enjoyed your letter in the Cobourg Daily Star explaining that the Cobourg Council do not listen to delegations and that they ignore letters in the newspaper and ignore petitions.

What you say is completely true, yet that is not the reason that some of use continue to write to the press and to make the occasional presentation. The reason we do these things is to let the public know what is going on.

Over the past few years the government of the town has gradually turned into a regime that thrives on secrecy. Matters are rarely discussed in public council meetings, and Councillors Mutton and Frost get criticized by their colleagues for asking questions or making statements. It is clear that currently is not only citizens that are not welcome to make presentations, but also new council members have not learned to treat the government of the town as a secret society with arcane rules. Of course when you were a councillor you also tended to ask questions and listen to delegations.

It is possible that the Cobourg has always thrived on secret government , but my reading of past successes leads me to believe that it was not always so. In any event secrecy and exclusiveness is no longer part of the Canadian way of life. Access to information laws and the federal and provincial human rights legislation are aimed at make the country more accessible to all.

It is ironic that the mayor and council should have pushed through all the condominium growth in Cobourg, but are now intent on criticizing newcomers if they try to express opinions relating to the governance of the town. In doing so the council are denying themselves the chance to benefit from some very real talent and experience, even if sometimes this experience was gained outside Northumberland County.

We believe that writing letters to the paper and making presentations is a major way of letting citizens know what is going on. Secrecy thrives less successfully with open communication and an informed electorate.

Anyhow, thanks for the letter. I guess we will continue to bang ourheads against the wall"


Sunday, November 4, 2007

The next big meeting

On Tuesday evening there is a meeting to hear about the plan, and how the County intends, to dispose of our local Police Service. Before all the new people to Town and those taxfighters amongst us get worked up about somebody daring to buck convention, by not accepting at face value the report prepared for the County lets look at the other side. Here is a copy of the remarks I intend to deliver at the Policing meeting on Wednesday evening. These remarks centre on three topics, one of which is the dubious savings calculations. The basic assumption made by realists is that the premise that the major portion of savings will come from new grants, that the urban municipalities will now qualify for, because somehow they have become Rural by joining in a large geographical area. These grants are not guaranteed and the programme is due for review in 2008.

The other point is that without grants and Police rebates, which are really compensatory sums of money given back to the municipalities for services not received, Cobourg's savings are zilch and the costs to go to the OPP will cost us a couple of million.

The last point is the important one. It does not matter how Cobourg and Port Hope vote on this issue, the Rurals can outvote us! A simple majority of votes can see our Police Services taken away from us, even the weighted voting cannot help us. And to rub salt into our wounds the way the Police costs have been calculated the rurals are using our savings to outvote us. As noted last week the savings calculations have been worked out in a non-traditional manner. The County percentage billing system, used in every other County programme, has been tossed aside in favour of a perversion called, "Fee for Service with Rural Adjustments"

So if you are remotely interested in any of this topic you should head out to the Lions' Centre on Elgin St. The meeting starts at 7pm but the real stuff gets going after the usual powerpoint bore at about 8.10pm.

The Port Hope Policing Meeting
Last Thursday I attended the Port Hope meeting and listened to the presentations. One hour and ten minutes after the meeting opened the Port Hope council was allowed to ask questions. Frankly I was disappointed with the quality of the questions that the collective councillors asked. In the big scheme of things playing to the local crowd by defending the quality of the Communications department didn't excuse the fact that they are gone.

In fact there were only two sparks. One when Deputy Mayor Jeff Lees asked about PSU rebates and the lack of performance to the contract they indicate and when he pointed out that the million dollars per year screening revenue will be lost. The answer to that was intriguing. "The RCMP is not happy with that information (CPIC) being sold privately." and implied that not only would the OPP be reluctant to screen but the practice may soon be outlawed! The PSU rebate question was answered indignantly and bureaucratically. "We always overestimate and Wellington County got back a million!" In a later answer to the question, "How will we get the screening money back if it goes to the County?" Mr Pyatt replied that Port Hope will get the money back in the County percentage 20%. The questioner quickly calculated that the amount coming back was only $59,000 different from the savings on the charts. His assessment - "For $59,000 folks, it just ain't worth it!"

The grant question was answered by Bill Pyatt who said that an assistant deputy had made the statement about the programme being a McGuinty program and it should stay, it is assumed by all that by just expanding the geographical area we automatically qualify, and that the expansion justifies the extra money going to the rurals.

Watkins was challenged by the Port Hope Police Association and asked if the Morley Hicks quote (this was where MH said that the offer of three years employment to all officers "makes the need for severances "unlikely"") was his or that of MH. Pyatt said that he summarized the 8 page opinion into the para in the report. "Were you aware that some of our provisions and benefits are superior to the OPP? Because if they are we have a case for severance!" replied the rep, Pyatt said that MH had copies of the 2 Collective Agreements (Cobourg & Port Hope) and none of the benefit schedules when they wrote the opinion. Interesting.

As to the question about levels of service, "We will have a police service of 130 of which the County will pay for 109" another memorable quote. As a provincial taxpayer we should be costing that. But it indicates that 109 will not provide the same level of service we are getting now.

So the questions just mount up. I was really surprised that nobody mentioned the fact that Port Hope has no chance in the voting to save what they have.



Wednesday, October 31, 2007

One more notch on Council's pistol butt

Remember the image of the gunslinger, after he had just killed someone, filing a notch on his pistol butt? Well Cobourg Council's pistol butt has just got another notch on it. I am a little late in reading this but over on Prof. R Washburn's blog, here there is a comment from Dilys Robertson announcing that she intends to resign from the Parks & Rec committee. Sad to see her go but that's exactly what the four old dead guys on Council want to see - dissidents leaving. Unfortunately it will have no real effect on the Council as this Council does only uses the committees as a convenience to them. Outspoken people need not apply.

I have never thanked Dilys properly for her demeanor and poise when faced with the MacDonald bombast and insult. She served the delegation well. I hope we see more of her in the future and that she doesn't hide in the garden instead of getting involved. Thank you Dilys, and Anne Hancock too for not giving up and writing a well-penned letter, calling a spade a spade, last week.

Monday, October 29, 2007

County Forest submissions about ATV use

Sent to me for public interest, if you have an opinion about the ATVs in the forest go to the site.

Dear Friends of the Northumberland Forest At LONG LAST – the County of Northumberland has put up a ‘feedback’ address to allow people to register their comments on the workings of the Northumbelrand County Forest Advisory committee and proposed management plan. Copies of earlier FAC meeting reports apparently will be posted to the site shortly.
You do not need to be logged in as a ‘member’ to post in the ‘feedback’ section.
PLEASE go to this site and make your opinion known!!!

Saturday, October 27, 2007

If you want input - you can't have it!!

This police discussion is going to nasty before it gets better. The debate is going to boil down into whether Cobourg can influence it own destiny and how much money are we going to save? Here is a letter that I wrote this week that sums it up

The first issue is where the Council of the day is going to be on the spot, but however much they huff and puff, what they think or do is of no consequence. And that is a democratic crime. For any municipality to lose a chunk of its local culture is wrenching. Sometimes people can't wait to chuck a piece overboard but in this case, the loss of a venerated service - Cobourg historically had a police force before a local council, we don't know what the community wants. But we do want the people of Cobourg to decide!

It will be a crying shame if the debate about the loss of local police service engenders less action than a silly piece of concrete at the harbourfront. Although the issue is the same - can we save money and do we need it. This debate has two aspects, both extremely important: one is the right to determine our own affairs, in other words Cobourg should decide to dissolve the Police Service not have it decided for us by people who don't like us. Secondly we need real facts upon which to judge the argument. The Policing Study penned by an OPP apologist is biased and misleading and many cases just inaccurate - factually wrong.

Given the importance of this subject I anxiously await what Councillor Frost is allowed to tell us - after all he is the coordinator.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Here is the video

At last week's council meeting an interesting interchange of opinions took place. Summarized by others as an exchange between a rude woman delegate and an exasperated councillor. The first video is of the delegation's presentation, which has been judged by some as "rude and sarcastic" others disagree and call it frank and blunt. See it here.

The other video is Councillor MacDonald's response, where he took exception to "allusions of corruption" and other considerations that may only exist in his mind. But he is out of line in his references to a delegation see it here