Tuesday, July 6, 2010
This topic has been a nagging itch
By collecting video like this
Many questions are raised especially about the identity of the fellow allowed, by Police inaction, to jump all over the police car.
This man was dressed in a snazzy flak jacket, not your normal Black Bloc issue tee-shirt and disappeared too easily into the crowd after his performance. Why wasn't he snatched up?Anyway a blogger called "Pushed to the left and Loving it" has chronicled these problems and asks for help in identifying the man in black. Check out her website here for the story but be sure to click on her home link to get some great stuff.
Here is another horror story: let you be the judge of this one. Shouldn't have been there or wayward police?
OK here's a workaround the comment problem:
Merklin Muffley has left a new comment on your post "This topic has been a nagging itch":
|A blogger looking for answers, eh Ben. Kinda like after-the-fact citizen journalism. I wonder what a real journalist with real bona fides and a real hate on for anyone encroaching on their turf would think of that?
Maybe Christie Blatchford could let fly once again and in her own self-discrediting, ass-kissing way let us poor dummies in on what's REALLY going on out there.
(Ah....whadda I care. I'm enjoying the entirely agreeable climate of beautiful Victoria at the moment -on my way to Courtney for the VanIsle Music Fest this weekend. Nothing like a cold pint of Granville Island lager at The Bent Mast to straighten me out. Got to Victoria from Van by way of a DeHavilland Twin Otter piloted by some 19-year old kid from Glasgow with an accent so thick you couldn't understand a word he said -and my relatives are all in Paisley for chrissakes. Cheers all!)
Posted by
Ben Burd
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6:54 AM
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Just what is going on here?
Interestingly enough, on that webpage we have an announcement that 1% of the LHIN's funding will be devoted to 'community funded health providers'. so the other shoe drops and it's another Biron masterpiece. Shut down the hospital clinics - score a brownie point for an 'integration process' and attach the palliative care to the ongoing moves to the amalgamation of hospice care - score another one for an 'integration process' and now you have two big brownie points for extra hospital funds by outsourcing, closing and connecting.
Posted by
Ben Burd
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6:24 AM
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Saturday, July 3, 2010
Can we have it both ways?
"This site is packed top to bottom with complaints about Council, yet now it is discussing giving Council a pay raise."
This comment appeared as #25 in response to the post of yesterday wherein the BurdReport argued for some truth in the matter of Cobourg Council's workload and the attendant plea from Councillor Mutton to pay the council more money.
This site has faithfully chronicled the failings of the current Council and its members, as well as congratulating them from time to time on good stuff. But perhaps the last post, about the plea for more money failed to show one of the underlying complaints about the issue, the way that incumbents whine about those who consider the job should be paid more and self servingly play to ignorant electors. Jeff Lees in Port Hope did it this week by suggesting a pay freeze for Council, causing Councillor Turck to wryly observe, "It must be an election year!".
Another commenter made the point that perhaps, because all those who tell the public that they are serving the public want us to believe that then there should be no honorarium - let them serve for nothing. Another commenter made the point that because there are people on Council of independent financial means the pay should be set at $50,000 and then all other income be deducted from that - innovative.
The BurdReport's position is very clear - both the system of governing; the coordinator system, and the composition of Council is faulty. So here is the plan:
- Council should be restructured into committees of the whole for three of the four weeks in a four week cycle. Planning, Financial and Operating committees should meet weekly and feed all the issues into a Council meeting that meets every four weeks.
- The Councillors should be paid at the rate of $30.00 per hour for every hour spent on Cobourg council business. This is meant to compensate councillors giving up their evenings.
- The meetings should take place in the evenings to allow the public to attend, This comment was emailed to me, by a sitting member of Council, and is very telling,"Consider that to reduce staff overtime, advisory committee meetings are more and more being moved to day time or reduced in number. This directly impacts the ability of citizens to participate." Perhaps less staff should be assigned to meetings then the public and council could make their own decisions, after all aren't they supposed to set policy rather than take direction?
- The Mayor should be actively seeking new members of the public to sit on Council, most incumbents see newcomers as a threat to their existence.
- Term limits must be imposed, A successful councillor needs to regenerate, and I will promise you if the unseated councillor is introspective they will look back and see their faults.
- The Council term must be reduced to two terms of four years
- Elect half of the members of Council each election
- Elections must be held every other year
The latest comments that Blogspot will not accept:
Wally Keeler has left a new comment on your post "Can we have it both ways?":
Wally Keeler disses the Northumberland News Report Card on Cobourg's town councillors.
Posted by
Ben Burd
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5:56 PM
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More G20 opinion
In a related story here, details of Police surveillance by the authorites in the UK are outlined and decried. It appears that the Police all over the world are using the same script and as such we must be aware of them, just as they must be aware that their efforts can be curbed. The County of Kent, again in the UK, has just been ordered by the courts to pay three protestors damages for unauthorised bag searches. It can be done here but first of all a reliable and impartial Inquiry must be convened. Bill Blair's kangeroo court will not suffice.
Posted by
Ben Burd
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9:14 AM
1 comments
Thursday, July 1, 2010
A wail from the inside
Ploughing old round is always tough and the last people you want to debate the topic of Council pay is the Council, for as we know each one of them will tell the public, "I don't want a raise - I would do it for nothing after all I am serving the public!" - Bollocks, each one of them is pandering to an ego or is one of the 10% of the population that likes going to meetings and opining, knowing that their opinion is being heard - they like the sound of their own voices. It is exhilerating to know that what you say is considered as important.
The problem with the present system is that there is a preponderence of the same kind of people sitting on council - retired white men who are superannuated. There are exceptions councillor Macdonald for instance was a househusband and in the past working people have served John Lindsay of the School Board and myself, who had an understanding employer. Working people are, and have been, few and far between when one looks at Council composition. One past Mayor told me that it cost her $26,000 a year just to replace her in her business when she was on Council business.
As a result this job is considered by ignorant people and the incumbents to be a part-time job. It may be, but part-time should still pay. Council members tell me that they can spend up to 20 hours a week in council duties, it should be noted that the Council meetings are only a small part of the job. Throw in dog-catching committees, police service boards and conservation authority meetings and it soon adds up.
So when the electorate looks at the elected Council after the election and mutters, "Is that all there is?' just remember there is one simple reason for this - good people want to be compensated.
Posted by
Ben Burd
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10:31 AM
31
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Celebrating Canada Day
Today's the day we collectively celebrate the country we live in. And as we chose it by default or purpose we must all like it here? Well I do but am perturbed by a couple of things that the Country has allowed to develop. These same concerns would be voiced if I lived in other western countries so Canada is not unique in these developments.First of all let me define my version of Freedom. Simply put Freedom is the ability to live anywhere, behave within the bounds of decency and decorum, assemble anywhere on public property, not be subject to demands from authority to justify why I am where I am, not have to produce ID on demand and to be free from demands to open bags and be subject to search and seizure. Gee I guess I have just rambled on about the value of the Charter of Freedoms. What a wonderful document!
So why do we complain so much about these values? Because they are being eroded bit by bit and every time one of them gets chipped away the next one is at risk.
After three full days of a cacophony from the air waves about the behaviour of the Toronto Police at the G20 demos there are a couple of conclusions. One is that Proactive Policing should be examined. In other words can we allow the Police to charge into a crowd to 'snatch' suspects or do we allow the 'suspects' to put themselves into a position that proves conclusively that they are in fact perpetrators and them arest them. The other is to define just what basic rights we have. Are the bags we carry subject to random search or not. Can this basic freedom be abrogated by 'special conditions'? The classic example is that when we voluntarily go to concerts and ball games we offer our bags for search. But we also choose to be there in the first place. Walking on the sidewalk is no activity for a search or to submit to an ID check. Anecdotally I have been told, many times, that the local Police, when they stop young people at the dead of night that they are told to "empty your pockets" what justification is there for that? I am sure that the officer who demands it knows that the demand may be illegal but does it anyway knowing that few people will complain.
In this excellent essay, Murray Dobbin, writes that these events are part of a larger problem and that the Police activities are part of an effort to control the public not to contain them. In conclusion, without being dramatic all I can do is to quote Niemolle: "THEY CAME FIRST for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.........." - you know the rest!
So my message is be watchful and don't be afraid to speak against perceived injustice as you see it, we are allowed to do it - just don't be afraid to do it!
A postscript from another commentator here, it's about the orders, confusion and mayhem in Toronto.
Posted by
Ben Burd
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7:11 AM
9
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Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Happy Canada Day
So there you have it folks the theory of reinvestment according to Dalton: transfer taxes from the business side to the consumer side and we will all be rich.
But here's the catch and where the BurdReport parts from the othodoxy. In order to see the theory turn into practise a couple of things have to happen: people have to be hired and prices have to go down. Because if those two things don't happen then we believe that business people, always out for a buck, will be pocketing the rebates produced by the 'input credits' and only they will have more money.
Perhaps i am being too cynical but when I see the Fraser institute and Buzz Hargrove lining up on the same side something is smelly.
Posted by
Ben Burd
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6:49 PM
3
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If the citizens of Port Hope fall for this
Just a couple of thoughts
Posted by
Ben Burd
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11:55 AM
10
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Sunday, June 27, 2010
2 hours to go
This story from the greatest Football writer alive two hours to go before the kickoff for the England Germany game, the biggest so far!
This story tells of the media war between the two rivals, interesting read.
And this classic prose from Rosie DiManno of the TOStar: "Last word goes to an English fan overheard in Durban:“The World Cup has turned out like World War II. The French surrendered early, the USA arrived late, and we’re left to fight the Germans.”
Posted by
Ben Burd
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8:41 AM
3
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