A scent of roses fills my kitchen. The yellow buds opened overnight in the vase over the sink.My daughter Heather brought them in yesterday because the forecast indicated they would not likely survive another night outside.
Other flowers have already been nipped and died .The rose continued to bud and bloom and the snapdragons still flourish.. Not quite in so much profusion as summer but still a cluster.
The garden is at the side of the house where originally was driveway. They are sheltered from wind on either side but not at the ends .It's a remarkable thing, in mid November to still have flowers blooming.
Not only that,snapdragons re-seed .They survive winter in the ground and come back in great profusion every spring.
The rose is more than thirty years old. I planted it with a dozen others, all long gone.
I may have inadvertently created an English garden in a Canadian environment or the globe really is warming. The latter is more likely than the former.
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Chapter 2
Snow does not fall to the extent it did.. Some years, gardens come out of the winter parched and hard. Plants are no longer kept warm with a blanket of snow.
Children don't build snow forts in the ditches at the end of driveways. There hasn't been an occasion in years, when we had to walk to Yonge Street for bread and milk because it couldn't be delivered
There's room to walk, so kids on the way to school don't have to share icy stretches with vehicles.
Other things have changed. Fewer retailers are in the town's core. From Wellington to Mosley, parking is never fully taken up . Saturdays are like Sundays with barely a sign of life.
I remember having to step wide and high over slushy snow to get into the town hall. It was not collected and taken elsewhere to melt.
We had no sidewalk plows either. Sidewalks had to be shovelled by owners.
We don't have sidewalks on my road.. So there's nothing to plow. We pay for the service just the same. It's an irritant that makes one especially sensitive to inequity and other senseless actions
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Chapter 3
A report returned again on Tuesday. It has been presented several times. It is altered a bit each timeit appears. Signed by the Chief Administrative Officer and Director of Environmental and Infrastructure Services,it was back despite a council directive otherwise.
A dis-used parking lot off Industrial Parkway is used for snow taken from the downtown core block a few times durimg three months of winter.
$800,000 has been budgeted since 2007 for a treatment facility for melting snow.
$163,000 has already been spent for a consultant to design a treatment facility for salt abatement to ensure safe drinking water.
The contradiction that first struck me is that salt dissolves. It can't be removed. Unless of course one is intent upon changing a desert into arable land.
Eventually, it was acknowledged salt cannot be removed.
But it was the stated purpose of the plan.,to satisfy an Environment Ministry directive.
After discussion and input from the community, the very existence of salt in snow melt became questionable.
The Mayor volunteered public works uses brine not crystallized salt. When snow is on the way, brine is applied to pavement. It melts the snow whenever it hits.Brine is crystallized salt with water added.
We apply minimal salt to keep roads passable.
Any salt remaining in snow plowed to the side of the road, would continue the melting process. There would be no snow to remove.
The aquifer from which our water is drawn is hundreds of feet below ground and separated from the surface by an impermeable layer of clay. It has been carbon dated at four thousand years old and despite centuries of human habitation on the surface,it is crystal clear and free of contamination from any human activity.
The report came forward. again. This time with a map of the well head area. Wells are on the other side of Yonge Street at the far end of the community centre parking lot. on Aurora heights Drive.
The new report said pollution from salt would take two years to travel. It moves horizontally.Well, I ask you; since when does water move sideways without a purposely built obstruction.
We had a presentation from a regional rep with results of several years of study, identifying risks to ground water supply.
Dry cleaning fluid was one.
Road salt was stated not to be a risk factor.
Council directed deferral until Ministry of Environment approval had been received. It was anticipated in November.
The report was on the agenda again on Tuesday despite Council's decision. Ensuring council's direction is followed. is the responsibility of the Mayor and Municipal Clerk.
By coincidence, a letter of approval from the Office of the Ministry of Environment was an add-on to the agenda which included re-appearance of the report.
The Ministry gave five year approval for a Plan for Salt Abatement.
Tuesday's report provided new information; snow is removed for the convenience of commuters.
The town does not provide parking for commuters.
No salt is used in parking lots provided by the town.
Why the town's administration deems it reasonable to persist in recommending $800.000 be expended on a plan that has not stood the test of political scrutiny totally mystifies me.
I suspect other representatives of the people may be having the same difficulty.
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Concluding Chapter.
If,despite evidence to the contrary, soluble salt,by some process unknown to man , remains suspended in particles, in snow, without melting said snow and being carried below a permeable layer of clay to an aquifer tested and determined to be 4,000 years old and free of all pollutants caused by human activity, two options are available to us.
The first is to leave the stuff where it is. at the side of the road. as we do in all other areas of the town,to melt naturally and find it's way into storm sewers, installed for the purpose, also at great expense to the taxpayer.
Did I mention the theory that water with unproven salt comment moves horizontally over a two year period towards the well head area rather than sinking into the ground. to be taken up over a two year period by growing vegetation.
The second is...well there is no second.
If you are still with me, thank you for your attention.
Imagine what it's like to respond again.and again. civilly and respectfully, to that which makes less sense as the argument continues. and involves spending$800,000 o your hard-earned resources.
Thursday, 17 November 2011
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4 comments:
Is the CAO running the town or is Council?
This is a very serious question that must be addressed immediately.
I don't recall voting for Mr. Garbe.
How have we come in just a little over a year from
having a Mayor crafted in pre-historic times to one
who loves the social swirl and is a complete
invertebrate when it comes to the business dealings
of our town ?
When Dawe enphasized the word 'no', we assumed
that it would be applied across the board. He must
stop groveling to senior staff. They WORK for us
and so should he.
When Mr. Garbe sits with all the other CAO's around a table it is always nice to be able to brag about the latest asset management software or snow containment facility.
Other people sit around and brag about their cars or their boats or their golf clubs.
Bragging rights are important to some people.
You would think keeping the lid on costs in this town would be something he might like to brag about too. Doesn't look he will be able to at this rate.
Just watched Alison's program. Nice guy but a one
term Mayor. Hope he has made plans for his future
because that job is not his to keep.
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