We'll be off for a couple of days
If you had been invited to Iggy's fundraiser that was to be held at well known local fundraiser's house on Saturday night, you get to save your money - it's been cancelled.
Read more: http://www.blogdoctor.me/2008/02/fix-page-elements-layout-editor-no.html#ixzz0MHHE3S64
An opinion piece from Cobourg, Ontario, Canada, to add your opinion email me - ben@eagle.ca
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
7:20 AM
1 comments
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
10:36 AM
11
comments
The great "Experiment in new democracy" has begun. In an admirable attempt to make history meet democratic function Cobourg Council has decided to play in the "Old Bailey" replica courtroom bequeathed to Cobourgers many years ago. But after seeing the players at work, despite a superb effort by Lorraine Brace and John Grozelle, of the Town, to equip the room with all the latest electronic gizmos (at a cost of $42,000, awarded in a sole source contract) the attempt failed to impress this lover of conversation and procedure. Looking at the picture I am reminded of a Supreme Court dressed in 'mufti' (a British Army slang term used to describe scruffy non uniform dress - civilian clothes!) A committee by its very definition is supposed to be a less formal meeting of convened people meeting to discuss topics in an informal way. This arrangement is no less formal than a regular council meeting, in fact the Chair of the committee was addressed many times, by various speakers as "Your Worship" when in fact he bore the title of "Chair". The main complaint of this setting is that, as in the ten year period prior to this move, when Council moved from the committee room at the back of the Council chamber to the Council chamber, basic organisational development has been ignored in designing committee meetings. Committee meetings are fora where members can debate, argue and generally speak to each other as they would in the backyard, forcefully and with dignity. In order to do this you have to have members at least being able to face the person you are discussing items with, hence the term - "sit down at the table". In this new forum nobody can see any body else let alone make conversation and therefore only statements can be made not polemic points of argument or debate. I am convinced that if all were to sit at the same table not only would a greater sense of teamwork develop but the level of animosity would be less, after all if the obese councillor at the west end of the bench wanted to speak to the other end and wake the comatose one at the other end, up with insults (they wouldn't in real life as they share many pursuits including the quaffing of ale) it is very easy to stare into the audience and do so. Try that around a round table and it may never happen.
Cobourg has been breaking the Procedural rules for nearly 25 years. Ever since the election of 1985 where Major Angus Read assumed the Mayoralty the procedure of committee meetings has been perverted to allow the Mayor to behave incorrectly. In an examination of Robert's Rules of Order, the final arbiter of procedure and decorum for public meetings and bodies the BurdReport has concluded that the practice of the Mayor being the Chair of the committee of the whole breaches common committee procedure.
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
6:20 AM
5
comments
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
6:49 AM
2
comments
Only the biggie this weekend for the Lib-noms, perhaps they were all eaten out and satiated after last weeks piggin' out? But apparently not as the Big Event was Lou Rinaldi's BBQ, at the Brighton Speedway. No hand went unshaken and no back was not slapped, and all will pretend to play nice. However mark your calendars for the one and only showcase event of the campaign - the All-Candidates meeting at the Alderville Community Centre next Sunday from 2-5pm.
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
9:47 AM
7
comments
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
6:56 AM
10
comments
Labels: cobourg, local opinion
Summer has come to Cobourg and the event season is in full bloom. Rotary Club inspired events - the Waterfront Festival and the Ribfest have brought to the surface the letters to the editor that have been lying in wait all season. Predictable problems: too many people, too much garbage, too much parking not enough washrooms for people who prefer to use private bushes and public sand. An editorial in NToday decries the situation, presumably because this is placed in the prime editorial spot as opposed to the opinion slots this is official newspaper policy. A story that told of Town workers picking up mounds of garbage bags, and quoted the Parks Supervisor as saying, "We have staff working till 11pm on Sunday night". This gives the impression that working until 11pm on Sunday to pick up garbage is unusual.
Just let me finish this by telling the world that a day after the Mayor received a letter from an grieved motorist who had been towed for overstaying a spot on the Pier, two weeks ago, an Executive Order was issued - "No more towing from overstays on the Pier" So how do we fulfill the demand for more enforcement of when enforceement of existing laws is over-ridden because of adverse publicity?
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
5:12 PM
3
comments
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
6:15 AM
14
comments

This weekend is a feast for gourmands as opposed to gourmets: Ribfest in Cobourg on Saturday and the Long Lunch on Sunday in Warkworth. BUT beware you may be interrupted in your greasy recreation by the possibility of Nominees attempting to get your vote - only if you are a Liberal the rest will be spoken to but dismissed as a waste of time.
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
7:08 AM
3
comments
All the credit for this goes to Mr W Keeler of Cobourg
Posted by
Ben Burd
at
2:45 PM
1 comments