I rode up hill and down dale thinking , if I make it there, I'll make it anywhere and I just about did.
But the last sidewalk rise on the north side of Tyler Street  is wot dun me in.
I  stopped  dead at the foot of the United Church steps. Ahead  was the vast vacant expanse of Yonge Street . A teeming Metropolis, it was not.  Sitting on a scooter gazing at it for twenty minutes  provides a complete perspective.
It was  10.30 Saturday morning . You could roll a bowling ball down the centre of each sidewalk and risk hitting not a living soul.  A customer swinging  his legs over the top rail of the ramp outside the Bank of Commerce  was the only sign of life.
I've ridden my bike to the orchards at the north end of town and sat on a tree stump looking down at the town at six o'clock in the morning for a  similar view of activity.
A few people walked around me. A couple circled  bicycles past me. I was in the centre of the sidewalk.
Then a woman's voice said: "Do you need help?"
"Do you know anything about scooters?" I asked. She didn't. But that  slight lady, younger than myself,  knew more than I.
Turn it off and take the key out. Put the key back in and start it again. And it did.  I was off and running, so-to-speak, and once again on my way to the market.
Thank you, neighbour.
It was a nice visit to the Market  but not as relaxed as it might have been.
The scooter was charged several times since the season changed, It was fully charged two nights before.  I didn't use it.  I thought the charge would still be in there.The needle was erratic when I set out. I went back and forth a few times and decided to go.
The manual says a full charge lasts twelve hours and  a 100 kms. I was only going six kms and for no longer than a couple of hours.  It should be alright.  I wanted it to be so.
Coming home  was  problematic. I could have gone back along the railway but I wasn't sure  of sidewalks. So, I didn't. Theresa  was in the car. If I needed her. she needed to find me.
I needed her.  A  sidewalk gradient  a fraction greater than others stopped me again.  When I  did the key thing, the scooters front wheels lifted ever so slightly off the ground.
Oh- Oh ...I thought. Ass -over- tea-kettle is not the image I wish to project nor how I wished to exit the world.
When I heard the  voice behind me asking  "Evelyn, are you in trouble?" I knew the gods were with me.
I know I don't fit the model of Fair Damsel in Distress.
But William(Bill) the  Red Allison, Of Willow Farms, North Aurora, Pipe Major of the White Heather Pipe Band, was certainly my Knight in Shining Red Helmet.
He pushed me and my scooter, with the help of the failing battery, half- way home and the rest of the way in the rain, by himself.
Sidewalk or no sidewalk , full charge or no, I will never go up and down that hill again. 'Cept maybe if  I lose a hundred pounds or grow a pair of wings.
Bill's wife Donna came into the house and had a  coffee while  we awaited her valiant spouse.
Turns out Bill reads my  blog. Our conversation continued as if  we had talked the day before.
Tim Jones had been urging Bill  to think about being a candidate. He feels his children are too young.
I think that's when a person should be doing it. When  their experience is the same as most other families  in the town.
I think a man who jumps out of his car to spend  hours in the middle of a Saturday to physically help somebody out of a real predicament, is exactly the kind of person who should run for Council.
Council is about overseeing  the business of the corporation. Ours is a small town. We have a multi-million dollar administration to manage the day to day operation.
It's not about listening to  nittering and nattering until all hours of the night. Or creating problems that don't exist  and failing to solve the ones that do.
It's not about clinging together in a block and giving a totally, irrational, individual absolute power to take revenge on imagined enemies, make life miserable for everyone around  and spend hundreds of thousands of  tax dollars for legal fees to settle political scores.
And hundreds of thousands more, to buy votes by acceding to selfish and self-serving demands.  because they  never had any intention of fulfilling commitments and don't know any other way  to ensure  re-election.
That is not what a Council is about.
We need people like Bill Allison. We need to assure them their families  will not be the losers. Council hours should accommodate members.  Families  should benefit from the experience along with every other young family in the community.
It should not be about  sacrifice.It's a worthwhile experience that cannot be duplicated anywhere.
Sometimes a citizen needs to hear that he or she is  needed  and that's all it takes.
So, if you know someone like Bill Allison or his wife Donna, encourage them to come forward as candidates.
Tell them.....God  knows, the need has never been so great.
Sunday, 23 May 2010
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