My daughter and I drove through the new industrial park on Leslie Street on Monday. It was a beautiful day. The sky was high, wide, incredibly blue and the day was beautifully warm. Despite being a construction zone, the area was spectacular with many white, high, well designed buildings.The Holiday Inn facility is close to completion. It can be seen from the 404. The other hotel structure was obvious though no sign identified it.
We were both dumbfounded. “How come we knew nothing about this?” I said. “Wow, this is fantastic.” We echoed each other “I/you will have to write something positive about it.”
I caught the inflection. Theresa thinks I’m negative. She would never say it...may not even allow herself to think it. My family believes it’s great that I continue to participate in the public debate. None would say anything to discourage me. But that may be, because there’s little chance of that happening.
We were even more impressed when we turned onto Wellington Street and noted signs of construction on the site south of Smart Centre. All those new employees mean a new retail market. New homes in the neighbourhood will generate new trade. Highway 404 and the carriage trade will contribute. Tournaments and swim meets at the Stronach Centre will create hotel clientelle. Walmart is already well patronized and provides numerous jobs. Empty stores in the Smart Centre will soon be occupied.
Now we have to wrap our heads around the new focus and determine what it means to the old Town Centre.
We drove along Wellington into the town. New tree planting will make it an impressive avenue. Closer in, old homes have been pleasingly re-tooled to serve new purpose, mostly professional. Just as envisaged fifty years ago when we planned for that to happen.
We turned north on Yonge Street, passed building after building of residential condos. Unleased space at ground level awaits new enterprise. It will follow the walk-in trade as residents re-discover life without cars. Came back south on Yonge Street. It was Monday...mid-day...traditionally a slow day...but last Monday, downtown Aurora was lively and if not exactly a hive of activity...definitely bustling.
There's room still for renewal on Yonge Street. If the town can get a handle on traffic, it could be a great neighbourly place to live, shop, and enjoy life.
It’s easy to imagine, having been around long enough to watch it evolve. Even more satisfying to have had a hand in making it happen.
Susan Seibert, are you reading me? I raise a glass to you, m’dear, m’darlin and to the council and administration that had a heart in the community.
Today, I turned on the video of the Mayor’s speech at The Chamber luncheon. The sound was imperfect. It echoed in the space. I heard less than half of what he said. It was an opportunity missed. He should ask Chris Watts if it can be improved.
Wednesday, 11 March 2020
Tuesday, 10 March 2020
YE PAYS YER MONEY....And THEN YE PAYS MORE
The immediate response to my last post was so slight, I got discouraged. I monopolized Anna Lozyk Romano’s blog instead. I know Anna doesn't mind. Still it doesn’t seem right.Yesterday I re-checked the stats on my blog and discovered on one March day, 69 people had read the post. I realize my blog has a limited audience at the best of times. It would seem sensible not to be overly concerned about immediate stats.
I don’t write with a view to make money though I don’t think that would necessarily be a bad thing.
But I do have this compulsion to spill the beans about what I know to be true. Anna has the same feeling that her blog is not widely read, yet I depend on it to keep me informed. I suspect the spike in my readership on that day in March may have been regional reps. Well that’s a good thing. They may collectively decide what I have to say is not worth noting. But they can’t be sure.
I read of the policy to invoice at-fault drivers for emergency calls to collisions on Anna’s post.
Nowhere else was there any discussion. Not at Aurora Council and apparently not in Newmarket either according to Mayor John Taylor.
Apparently the only question in Aurora was “Why did it take so long?”
My immediate reaction was ....why now?
How much revenue will it generate? How much will it cost to administer? Will it reduce the budget? If not, why not? What are they planning to do with the extra money? Buy more gold braid for the Chief’s uniform? Why is he wearing a uniform? Why are any of them provided with a uniform? They don't fight fires or respond to emergency calls in uniform?
But the most significant question of all: if it’s right and proper to charge an at-fault driver for the emergency call to a collision...why is it not also appropriate to invoice a person responsible for a fire in their home for the fire department to fight the fire?
If a person falls asleep with a lit cigarette in his hand, or leaves a pot of oil over a flame on the stove, or overloads a circuit, or messes with wiring, or if a landlord fails to maintain wiring in a safe condition...are they not all similarly at-fault the cause of fires. Should the person responsible not be similarly invoiced for the cost of fighting the fire?
Why should the taxpayer subsidize the cost?
With all the people sitting around the council table...elected to represent the taxpayers ...were none of these questions asked and answered? What do they think they’re there for? Why do we pay them? Are they just figures in the crowd scene? Backdrop to the play?
If a sewer pipe collapses, the town repairs it. But the property owner pays what it costs for that part of the repair on their property.
If a private property abuts a public property, the town will pay half the cost of a fence but it must be built to the town’s standard.
If I took the time I could probably come up with other examples of non-subsidization. But enough is enough. Towing is a private service. Companies compete. If municipalities invoice the cost of emergency measures, what law gives them a monopoly in the emergency business?
Contracting out public services to avoid providing employees with benefits is now the prevailing method of cost-saving in the public sector. If senior’s housing and senior’s care and child care can be farmed out by the Region to save, why not fire protection and emergency calls.
I’m not just asking.
I want answers.
I don’t write with a view to make money though I don’t think that would necessarily be a bad thing.
But I do have this compulsion to spill the beans about what I know to be true. Anna has the same feeling that her blog is not widely read, yet I depend on it to keep me informed. I suspect the spike in my readership on that day in March may have been regional reps. Well that’s a good thing. They may collectively decide what I have to say is not worth noting. But they can’t be sure.
I read of the policy to invoice at-fault drivers for emergency calls to collisions on Anna’s post.
Nowhere else was there any discussion. Not at Aurora Council and apparently not in Newmarket either according to Mayor John Taylor.
Apparently the only question in Aurora was “Why did it take so long?”
My immediate reaction was ....why now?
How much revenue will it generate? How much will it cost to administer? Will it reduce the budget? If not, why not? What are they planning to do with the extra money? Buy more gold braid for the Chief’s uniform? Why is he wearing a uniform? Why are any of them provided with a uniform? They don't fight fires or respond to emergency calls in uniform?
But the most significant question of all: if it’s right and proper to charge an at-fault driver for the emergency call to a collision...why is it not also appropriate to invoice a person responsible for a fire in their home for the fire department to fight the fire?
If a person falls asleep with a lit cigarette in his hand, or leaves a pot of oil over a flame on the stove, or overloads a circuit, or messes with wiring, or if a landlord fails to maintain wiring in a safe condition...are they not all similarly at-fault the cause of fires. Should the person responsible not be similarly invoiced for the cost of fighting the fire?
Why should the taxpayer subsidize the cost?
With all the people sitting around the council table...elected to represent the taxpayers ...were none of these questions asked and answered? What do they think they’re there for? Why do we pay them? Are they just figures in the crowd scene? Backdrop to the play?
If a sewer pipe collapses, the town repairs it. But the property owner pays what it costs for that part of the repair on their property.
If a private property abuts a public property, the town will pay half the cost of a fence but it must be built to the town’s standard.
If I took the time I could probably come up with other examples of non-subsidization. But enough is enough. Towing is a private service. Companies compete. If municipalities invoice the cost of emergency measures, what law gives them a monopoly in the emergency business?
Contracting out public services to avoid providing employees with benefits is now the prevailing method of cost-saving in the public sector. If senior’s housing and senior’s care and child care can be farmed out by the Region to save, why not fire protection and emergency calls.
I’m not just asking.
I want answers.
Saturday, 18 January 2020
”REGIONAL MATTERS” And HOW THEY AFFECT US
Less by design than accident , I retrieved the Regional Publication from the re-cycling box at Christmas. It’s the first one I’ve seen. To-day I want to draw attention to the back page. There
are three rows of photos of members of York Regional Council...twenty-one in total. nine of them are Mayors of local Councils. The rest are Regional councillors. All,except the chair, serve also on local Councils. All receive remuneration from both sources. Not all receive the same benefits. Benefit packages are said to be worth $30 thousand a year.
Regional councillors receive termination settlements, if defeated from office. Not sure if they quit .If a Regional Councillor dies while in office, life insurance is paid.
Taking a wild guess ,I would say, average cost of a regional councillor to taxpayers might be as much as $200.thousand a year . Multiplied by twenty-one , quite a tidy burden.
York Region was created in 1971. Next year ,it will be half a century old.
Metro Toronto was around that age when the boroughs were amalgamated and Metro
was wiped out. Toronto became a single government unit with forty-four Councillors and a Mayor. Council meetings lasted several days. Decisions were slow in the making.
One of the first decisions made by Premier Ford when he took office was to cut the number of Toronto Councillors almost in half to twenty- four members. A mighty clamour ensued. A year has passed. No great catastrophe has occurred.
York Region as noted in the opening sentence has twenty-one councillors. On top of that,
nine municipal Councils with I don’t know how many, ward and elected at large local councillors. In terms of remuneration and benefits most have re-classified themselves as employees. They are not hired. They cannot be fired. But somehow they have managed to re-classify remuneration and benefits to their substantial advantage. Payroll for municipal council undoubtedly exceeds that of Regional Council. It absorbs millions of dollars.
It would be a simple matter to discover the tally to the penny. It may even be part of the report already generated for the Province for changes they intended. We do not know that. The report has not been released. Regional Councillors asked to receive the report. Whether or not that happened,we are not aware.
We do not know what changes were intended. We do know Aurora and Newmarket expressed
opposition , assuring the Province the current system serves us very well.it certainky serves them well.
Our elected representatives opposed change without disclosure of the change proposed.
It is reasonable to assume ,changes proposed by the Ford government would be aimed at
reducing numbers; bodies and financial cost. It makes equal sense the taxpayers of York Region
are entitled to know what was proposed in the shelved report.
It has not been suggested.
I am suggesting it now.
are three rows of photos of members of York Regional Council...twenty-one in total. nine of them are Mayors of local Councils. The rest are Regional councillors. All,except the chair, serve also on local Councils. All receive remuneration from both sources. Not all receive the same benefits. Benefit packages are said to be worth $30 thousand a year.
Regional councillors receive termination settlements, if defeated from office. Not sure if they quit .If a Regional Councillor dies while in office, life insurance is paid.
Taking a wild guess ,I would say, average cost of a regional councillor to taxpayers might be as much as $200.thousand a year . Multiplied by twenty-one , quite a tidy burden.
York Region was created in 1971. Next year ,it will be half a century old.
Metro Toronto was around that age when the boroughs were amalgamated and Metro
was wiped out. Toronto became a single government unit with forty-four Councillors and a Mayor. Council meetings lasted several days. Decisions were slow in the making.
One of the first decisions made by Premier Ford when he took office was to cut the number of Toronto Councillors almost in half to twenty- four members. A mighty clamour ensued. A year has passed. No great catastrophe has occurred.
York Region as noted in the opening sentence has twenty-one councillors. On top of that,
nine municipal Councils with I don’t know how many, ward and elected at large local councillors. In terms of remuneration and benefits most have re-classified themselves as employees. They are not hired. They cannot be fired. But somehow they have managed to re-classify remuneration and benefits to their substantial advantage. Payroll for municipal council undoubtedly exceeds that of Regional Council. It absorbs millions of dollars.
It would be a simple matter to discover the tally to the penny. It may even be part of the report already generated for the Province for changes they intended. We do not know that. The report has not been released. Regional Councillors asked to receive the report. Whether or not that happened,we are not aware.
We do not know what changes were intended. We do know Aurora and Newmarket expressed
opposition , assuring the Province the current system serves us very well.it certainky serves them well.
Our elected representatives opposed change without disclosure of the change proposed.
It is reasonable to assume ,changes proposed by the Ford government would be aimed at
reducing numbers; bodies and financial cost. It makes equal sense the taxpayers of York Region
are entitled to know what was proposed in the shelved report.
It has not been suggested.
I am suggesting it now.
Wednesday, 8 January 2020
WARD OFF THE QUESTION
A Councillor is not allowed to impugn the motives of another Councillor. Rightly so. According to rules of debate, it compels focus on the question under debate. On the other hand, when no other reason is offered in support of the motion, motive becomes the whole of it.
Finger cramps are part of my problem with blog posting...and aging of course. Commenting on Facebook is easier and very convenient. but only seen by a limited number. My grandchildren have set me up with a keyboard for my ipad and a tray on my walker. So I sit on the reclining chair with everything at my fingertips, so to speak. I’m giving you the picture to explain any shortcomings that may be with this post. The late great Andy Foote, who had the last few minutes of “Sixty Minutes” on a Sunday night, used to complain about growing old. He had a routine minimal surgical procedure and never came out of it. He didn’t have anything to complain about after that.
I never thought much about growing old. I certainly never imagined how it would be with a personal computer. In the history of mankind, old age has never been so interesting. It is my intention to avoid even the most routine surgery. Unless of course life becomes so miserable it presents as a suitable exit.
Anyway, to get to the subject of this post...a ward system for the Town of Aurora....What have we heard to recommend it? Are people complaining about poor representation? I don’t think so. If they were, why did Council decide to reduce the number of Councillors in the last election? Who asked for that? Or was it merely a step in the larger strategy? Was the ward system the real purpose of the plan?
Here’s where we get down to motive in the absence of logic. The question of wards was on the ballot already. Voters said no.
Our Mayor uses “Getting things done” as his modus operandi. It’s a good one. But not exactly what we think of when that getting done is against the expressed will of the people.
So who benefits from the ward system? Well who moved the motion and amended it in a most peculiar fashion? An amendment cannot change the purpose of a motion. This motion authorized funds for a planning study. Then amended to add unanimous support by Council for that which was to be studied. The amendment was not in order. It should have been ruled out of order.
So who is the apparent architect of this fiendish plot? Councillor Michael Thompson is the mover and shaker there-off. What do we know of the Councillor? Not a lot...Why is that? The Councillor keeps his head down and stays out of trouble. He likes the job. He wants to keep it. He is prepared to do whatever it takes. But he’s not alone.
And the easiest way to ensure the job is theirs ad infinitum is with a ward system. No town wide campaign...no responsibility for decisions made that do not affect the Ward. Easy to classify as a full-time position and collect benefits like health plans, life insurance, pensions and termination settlements in the event of defeat at the polls etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.
If the pattern of Markham is followed, each Ward Councillor would receive a budget. They might share an office and staff so they can follow a private career or operate a business and milk the system for everything it has to offer.
Don’t tell me I’m exaggerating. It’s happening all around us. The former Regional Chair collected a quarter of a million a year from the Region and practiced law at the same time.
The Province obviously intended to do some re-organizing to correct the situation but got cold feet in the face of Doug Ford’s lack of political skill.
The situation is as bad as it can be. Like every public institution, municipal councils in Ontario have become their own reason for being and that is to serve the people who are supposed to be doing the serving.
My fingers have held up this far but now I have to review the copy.
Finger cramps are part of my problem with blog posting...and aging of course. Commenting on Facebook is easier and very convenient. but only seen by a limited number. My grandchildren have set me up with a keyboard for my ipad and a tray on my walker. So I sit on the reclining chair with everything at my fingertips, so to speak. I’m giving you the picture to explain any shortcomings that may be with this post. The late great Andy Foote, who had the last few minutes of “Sixty Minutes” on a Sunday night, used to complain about growing old. He had a routine minimal surgical procedure and never came out of it. He didn’t have anything to complain about after that.
I never thought much about growing old. I certainly never imagined how it would be with a personal computer. In the history of mankind, old age has never been so interesting. It is my intention to avoid even the most routine surgery. Unless of course life becomes so miserable it presents as a suitable exit.
Anyway, to get to the subject of this post...a ward system for the Town of Aurora....What have we heard to recommend it? Are people complaining about poor representation? I don’t think so. If they were, why did Council decide to reduce the number of Councillors in the last election? Who asked for that? Or was it merely a step in the larger strategy? Was the ward system the real purpose of the plan?
Here’s where we get down to motive in the absence of logic. The question of wards was on the ballot already. Voters said no.
Our Mayor uses “Getting things done” as his modus operandi. It’s a good one. But not exactly what we think of when that getting done is against the expressed will of the people.
So who benefits from the ward system? Well who moved the motion and amended it in a most peculiar fashion? An amendment cannot change the purpose of a motion. This motion authorized funds for a planning study. Then amended to add unanimous support by Council for that which was to be studied. The amendment was not in order. It should have been ruled out of order.
So who is the apparent architect of this fiendish plot? Councillor Michael Thompson is the mover and shaker there-off. What do we know of the Councillor? Not a lot...Why is that? The Councillor keeps his head down and stays out of trouble. He likes the job. He wants to keep it. He is prepared to do whatever it takes. But he’s not alone.
And the easiest way to ensure the job is theirs ad infinitum is with a ward system. No town wide campaign...no responsibility for decisions made that do not affect the Ward. Easy to classify as a full-time position and collect benefits like health plans, life insurance, pensions and termination settlements in the event of defeat at the polls etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.
If the pattern of Markham is followed, each Ward Councillor would receive a budget. They might share an office and staff so they can follow a private career or operate a business and milk the system for everything it has to offer.
Don’t tell me I’m exaggerating. It’s happening all around us. The former Regional Chair collected a quarter of a million a year from the Region and practiced law at the same time.
The Province obviously intended to do some re-organizing to correct the situation but got cold feet in the face of Doug Ford’s lack of political skill.
The situation is as bad as it can be. Like every public institution, municipal councils in Ontario have become their own reason for being and that is to serve the people who are supposed to be doing the serving.
My fingers have held up this far but now I have to review the copy.
Thursday, 17 October 2019
LITTLE DID YOU KNOW
A poll in one of the town’s weekly publication poses a patently foolish question
about municipal autonomy and gun control. It arises from a news item about a
discussion between the Prime Minister of Canada and the Mayor of Aurora.
They may not be of the same age but they are both products of the modern education system.
Civics must have been another subject teachers decided need not be taught.
Neither appears to be aware that a municipality is low man on the totem pole. Canada’s Constitution does not give them the right to exist. The Province grants their authority. Premier Ford could decide tomorrow to consign our municipality into history.There is no practical reason why he shouldn’t .In 1971 when the region was planned ,Newmarket and Aurora were planned as a single urban node. We were successful in arguing services provided locally and separately at minimal or no cost was reason enough to hold off on amalgamation.
Aurora has enjoyed autonomy for an additional fifty years. The cost of two separate administrations
no longer makes economic sense nor has it since George Timpson was elected Mayor, a
full-time firefighter brigade was established and then amalgamated with Newmarket to form a more powerful bargaining unit. The service is classified essential. Because the right to strike is not
available ,agreements must be settled by arbitration and it was off to the races, no holds barred,
and financial control became a mythical reality.
When I was first elected , Tridel Corporation was just the Del Zotto brothers. They had a former
North York bylaw officer to represent them in an application to develop.They developed the rental apartment complex at the corner of Wellington Street and Murray Drive. He told about a study North York commissioned which determined the average time spent fighting fires was 18 minutes in a year.
Firehalls were beacons of brightness and colour with gardens outside and competitions for best and part of the neighbourhood. Fire Pumpers were bright and shiny and spotlessly clean and usually prominently displayed. Firefighters maintained the firehall when they weren’t fighting fires. Then the Professional Firefighters Association successfully argued they were firefighters, not janitors,so they didn’t do it anymore when they weren’t fighting fires.
Nowadays, sleeping and recreation facilities are provided at firehalls...kitchens,where they can test recipes to while away the hours when they’re not fighting fires and take beefcake photos for fund-raising calendars I made myself very unpopular with firefighters wives when I drew attention to the
Coke machine that sold beer in the new firehall. At the time, I didn’t even know that anybody who knew, could drop in and chug-a-lug when they felt the need.
I have heard of a Toronto firefighter who lives in Vancouver . His wife was an airline stewardess so he flew home at no cost, between shifts. I’m not sure how that fits in with being an emergency
service and being on call for whatever emergency might arise. I’m not even sure the story is true.
Repeating it is just one of the little perks of no longer being in elected office .
As often happens, this post took off in it’s own direction. My intention was to illustrate the impact of firefighter’s compensation on settlements for other public services. But that’s a longer story than
one might imagine...as old as the history of Ontario.
Neither appears to be aware that a municipality is low man on the totem pole. Canada’s Constitution does not give them the right to exist. The Province grants their authority. Premier Ford could decide tomorrow to consign our municipality into history.There is no practical reason why he shouldn’t .In 1971 when the region was planned ,Newmarket and Aurora were planned as a single urban node. We were successful in arguing services provided locally and separately at minimal or no cost was reason enough to hold off on amalgamation.
Aurora has enjoyed autonomy for an additional fifty years. The cost of two separate administrations
no longer makes economic sense nor has it since George Timpson was elected Mayor, a
full-time firefighter brigade was established and then amalgamated with Newmarket to form a more powerful bargaining unit. The service is classified essential. Because the right to strike is not
available ,agreements must be settled by arbitration and it was off to the races, no holds barred,
and financial control became a mythical reality.
When I was first elected , Tridel Corporation was just the Del Zotto brothers. They had a former
North York bylaw officer to represent them in an application to develop.They developed the rental apartment complex at the corner of Wellington Street and Murray Drive. He told about a study North York commissioned which determined the average time spent fighting fires was 18 minutes in a year.
Firehalls were beacons of brightness and colour with gardens outside and competitions for best and part of the neighbourhood. Fire Pumpers were bright and shiny and spotlessly clean and usually prominently displayed. Firefighters maintained the firehall when they weren’t fighting fires. Then the Professional Firefighters Association successfully argued they were firefighters, not janitors,so they didn’t do it anymore when they weren’t fighting fires.
Nowadays, sleeping and recreation facilities are provided at firehalls...kitchens,where they can test recipes to while away the hours when they’re not fighting fires and take beefcake photos for fund-raising calendars I made myself very unpopular with firefighters wives when I drew attention to the
Coke machine that sold beer in the new firehall. At the time, I didn’t even know that anybody who knew, could drop in and chug-a-lug when they felt the need.
I have heard of a Toronto firefighter who lives in Vancouver . His wife was an airline stewardess so he flew home at no cost, between shifts. I’m not sure how that fits in with being an emergency
service and being on call for whatever emergency might arise. I’m not even sure the story is true.
Repeating it is just one of the little perks of no longer being in elected office .
As often happens, this post took off in it’s own direction. My intention was to illustrate the impact of firefighter’s compensation on settlements for other public services. But that’s a longer story than
one might imagine...as old as the history of Ontario.
Friday, 11 October 2019
DISCRETION...THE BETTER PART OF VALOUR
The late Jack Layton had a highly successful career in Toronto politics before he became Leader of New Democrats. He didn’t keep his party allegiance a secret. The machinery was probably, in good part, responsible for his success. It wasn't until the Federal campaign we learned he was from Quebec. Grew up there, spoke fluent French and shared the culture...all attributes which no doubt contributed to success in winning seats in La Belle Province.
Then he died.
His courage in continuing the campaign, though he knew he was dying, may also have been a factor. His political colleagues certainly showed their respect at his funeral. Only another politician would understand the depth of his commitment.
Quebec underpinnings were not known in his municipal career. Toronto was and still is, in many respects, an Orange Protestant town. It would be a waste of time for example, to apply to Toronto Police Force without “The Ring” (masonic).
Mr Layton wouldn’t lie about his background. There would be no need. It would simply not be mentioned.
I read Jagmeet Singh refers to Quebec's new law prohibiting religious symbols from being worn by some public servants in the work place as divisive and inciting hatred.
Stuff and nonsense.
Muslim women are not compelled to wear a symbol of their religion. Many choose otherwise. It Simplifies their lives in the new country they’ve chosen. As Jack Layton chose not to broadcast in Protestant Toronto that he was from Quebec.
When I started this post, three days ago, the theme running through my head was loosely connected to legal action I undertook against a former Mayor of Aurora and five Councillors for libelling me in an ad paid for with town resources.
I was not successful. I’m not in the habit of giving up a fight. But I had already incurred substantial debt for legal fees and settlement required further debt.To continue the fight would have meant my home would have had to be sold. I no longer had any confidence in the integrity of the legal system, nor the resources to continue. The defendants, on the other hand, had their costs paid by the Town’s insurance company. None of the normal restraints applied.
My family’s advice “Put it behind you mother. Get on with your life”
So I did.
But to keep it behind me, I must keep it buried for a while yet. The Judge’s name, his dismissal of my jury, time taken to deliver and gross lack of reasoning in his decision has not diminished my anger. For my own peace of mind, I need to let it lie for a while yet.
Then he died.
His courage in continuing the campaign, though he knew he was dying, may also have been a factor. His political colleagues certainly showed their respect at his funeral. Only another politician would understand the depth of his commitment.
Quebec underpinnings were not known in his municipal career. Toronto was and still is, in many respects, an Orange Protestant town. It would be a waste of time for example, to apply to Toronto Police Force without “The Ring” (masonic).
Mr Layton wouldn’t lie about his background. There would be no need. It would simply not be mentioned.
I read Jagmeet Singh refers to Quebec's new law prohibiting religious symbols from being worn by some public servants in the work place as divisive and inciting hatred.
Stuff and nonsense.
Muslim women are not compelled to wear a symbol of their religion. Many choose otherwise. It Simplifies their lives in the new country they’ve chosen. As Jack Layton chose not to broadcast in Protestant Toronto that he was from Quebec.
When I started this post, three days ago, the theme running through my head was loosely connected to legal action I undertook against a former Mayor of Aurora and five Councillors for libelling me in an ad paid for with town resources.
I was not successful. I’m not in the habit of giving up a fight. But I had already incurred substantial debt for legal fees and settlement required further debt.To continue the fight would have meant my home would have had to be sold. I no longer had any confidence in the integrity of the legal system, nor the resources to continue. The defendants, on the other hand, had their costs paid by the Town’s insurance company. None of the normal restraints applied.
My family’s advice “Put it behind you mother. Get on with your life”
So I did.
But to keep it behind me, I must keep it buried for a while yet. The Judge’s name, his dismissal of my jury, time taken to deliver and gross lack of reasoning in his decision has not diminished my anger. For my own peace of mind, I need to let it lie for a while yet.
Sunday, 6 October 2019
TRYING TO MAKE SENSE OF IT
I caught a glimpse of the Prime Minister expressing regrets once more for injustice inflicted on past generations of original inhabitants of North America by past governments . The Human Rights Division has ruled the government must pay $52 billion in compensation. The government has appealed the decision but spokespersons explain, apologetically, process leaves them no option.
$52 billion...hmm...that’s not pocket change...makes me think of a couple of other groups who could be eligible.A community in Nova Scotia has ancestors, brought here as slaves.Who knows how many children were shipped from the UK . TO solve their poverty problem they transported them to Canada and let anyone who wanted take them as unpaid labour... no follow up to ensure their wellbeing. Many farmers of the day placed a higher value on animals than they did children.
Parents sold their children into indentured service to pay off debt. They might be able to make similar claims and get a judgement for another $52billion.
Merrily ...merrily...blithely as they go....the dollars.
What about the Métis people...John A MacDonald’s statue has been removed.He was responsible for hanging Louis Riel. Has anybody thought about demanding compensation for that injustice.Would he have to be tried again, posthumously, before they could calculate how much wrongful death might
be worth in dollars.
In an FB commentI , I professed ignorance of Indigenous affairs. I sought answers to various questions. As yet, no-one has chosen to enlighten me. It could mean two things. They don’t know
the answers or they don’t want to tell me.
I am left with an impression . Indigenous people choose to live on Reserves. Certain
advantage accrues.They pay no taxes..elect a Chief ...manage their own affairs...
and receive annual payments to fund the cost from the Federal government under Treaty Agreements Children often have to be placed in foster care because parents are not caring for them .It’s
not a good option but it’s the best we have.
On reservations ,sewage contaminates drinking water . There’s something about mercury but I’m not sure where it’s coming from.Housing is inadequate. Schools are poor. Children are addicted to drugs and alcohol before they are ten years old. And little girls engaged in prostitution in Winnipeg disappear regularly without apparent concern.
There’s no reason to expect $52 billion in compensation for injustice to children of past generations will likely be spent more wisely than the rest. Why would it be different now?
It’s my impression from what I’ve read over the years. I stand to be corrected.
For generations migrants have been leaving homes, families and everything familiar to travel thousands of miles for better opportunities for their children.Some return. Transition being too hard. Most endure. Not all are successful but the children are better off.
Why should little Indian children expect less from their parents?
$52 billion...hmm...that’s not pocket change...makes me think of a couple of other groups who could be eligible.A community in Nova Scotia has ancestors, brought here as slaves.Who knows how many children were shipped from the UK . TO solve their poverty problem they transported them to Canada and let anyone who wanted take them as unpaid labour... no follow up to ensure their wellbeing. Many farmers of the day placed a higher value on animals than they did children.
Parents sold their children into indentured service to pay off debt. They might be able to make similar claims and get a judgement for another $52billion.
Merrily ...merrily...blithely as they go....the dollars.
What about the Métis people...John A MacDonald’s statue has been removed.He was responsible for hanging Louis Riel. Has anybody thought about demanding compensation for that injustice.Would he have to be tried again, posthumously, before they could calculate how much wrongful death might
be worth in dollars.
In an FB commentI , I professed ignorance of Indigenous affairs. I sought answers to various questions. As yet, no-one has chosen to enlighten me. It could mean two things. They don’t know
the answers or they don’t want to tell me.
I am left with an impression . Indigenous people choose to live on Reserves. Certain
advantage accrues.They pay no taxes..elect a Chief ...manage their own affairs...
and receive annual payments to fund the cost from the Federal government under Treaty Agreements Children often have to be placed in foster care because parents are not caring for them .It’s
not a good option but it’s the best we have.
On reservations ,sewage contaminates drinking water . There’s something about mercury but I’m not sure where it’s coming from.Housing is inadequate. Schools are poor. Children are addicted to drugs and alcohol before they are ten years old. And little girls engaged in prostitution in Winnipeg disappear regularly without apparent concern.
There’s no reason to expect $52 billion in compensation for injustice to children of past generations will likely be spent more wisely than the rest. Why would it be different now?
It’s my impression from what I’ve read over the years. I stand to be corrected.
For generations migrants have been leaving homes, families and everything familiar to travel thousands of miles for better opportunities for their children.Some return. Transition being too hard. Most endure. Not all are successful but the children are better off.
Why should little Indian children expect less from their parents?
LIFE FOR SOME IS A SHORT TOUGH TREK
I watched a movie , The Lincoln Lawyer, on Netflicks last night. There wasn’t much depth to it.But it made me realize something. From having a great interest in the law from every angle ,I have
become cynical.I thought of the justice system as one step beyond politics...decisions made
strictly on the weight of evidence have to be better .
I served nine years on Ontario Social Services Appeal Board ..a quasi-judicial body where I learned about rules of evidence. Board members travelled all over Ontario , including IndianReservations. We heard arguments from local welfare officials, provincial social workers, well-to-do parents ,with lawyers, petitioning for fees for their children to attend private boarding schools in the States . Because Ontario provided no support for kids with learning difficulties.
Legal Aid lawyers represented clients refused permanent disability allowances. Local welfare
workers were there to support clients who had been denied long-term disability even though they’d been on welfare assistance for years. Welfare was intended for short term financial support.
I was called for jury duty once. It doesn’t necessarily mean serving on a jury. It means being one of a pool lawyers choose from. After selection first thing in the morning, when I wasn’t chosen,I’d go into a court room and sit through a proceeding.
Eventually I was chosen and after the trial ,chosen again by the jury to be jury master and deliver the decision.that was in the Provincial Court House on University Avenue in Toronto.
On one occasion, I sat in a courtroom in Newmarket for weeks, for the trial of a pathetic little guy who’d yearned to be a policeman and now found himself charged byYork Region police for making accusations against a Vaughan politician. Jellyfish Julian Fantino was a witness in the case.The defendant had been campaign manager for a council candidate who promised him a job if he got elected. Before that , in high school , the defendant had been a regular informant in the TIPS program
The candidate was elected. He didn’t keep his promise. The defendant made an accusation of wrong-
doing.
He was undersized , in a suit miles too big with sleeves that reached his finger-tips. He wore a cheap wig because he had lost his hair. He was twenty-seven years old . With all the weight of York Region Police on top of him, he was found guilty. Before sentence, he was diagnosed with. AIDS.What happened to him after, I do not know.
Throughout the trial his mother and sister ,also small people, were in attendance. They did not
understand English well and gave all the appearance of clinging to each other, scared and bewildered.
My heart went out to them and their unfortunate man-child. The odds were stacked against him. He never had a chance.
Like most of my posts ,this one took off on it’s own direction .I will get back to the one intended but
for now , this sad and catastrophic little tale ends here.
become cynical.I thought of the justice system as one step beyond politics...decisions made
strictly on the weight of evidence have to be better .
I served nine years on Ontario Social Services Appeal Board ..a quasi-judicial body where I learned about rules of evidence. Board members travelled all over Ontario , including IndianReservations. We heard arguments from local welfare officials, provincial social workers, well-to-do parents ,with lawyers, petitioning for fees for their children to attend private boarding schools in the States . Because Ontario provided no support for kids with learning difficulties.
Legal Aid lawyers represented clients refused permanent disability allowances. Local welfare
workers were there to support clients who had been denied long-term disability even though they’d been on welfare assistance for years. Welfare was intended for short term financial support.
I was called for jury duty once. It doesn’t necessarily mean serving on a jury. It means being one of a pool lawyers choose from. After selection first thing in the morning, when I wasn’t chosen,I’d go into a court room and sit through a proceeding.
Eventually I was chosen and after the trial ,chosen again by the jury to be jury master and deliver the decision.that was in the Provincial Court House on University Avenue in Toronto.
On one occasion, I sat in a courtroom in Newmarket for weeks, for the trial of a pathetic little guy who’d yearned to be a policeman and now found himself charged byYork Region police for making accusations against a Vaughan politician. Jellyfish Julian Fantino was a witness in the case.The defendant had been campaign manager for a council candidate who promised him a job if he got elected. Before that , in high school , the defendant had been a regular informant in the TIPS program
The candidate was elected. He didn’t keep his promise. The defendant made an accusation of wrong-
doing.
He was undersized , in a suit miles too big with sleeves that reached his finger-tips. He wore a cheap wig because he had lost his hair. He was twenty-seven years old . With all the weight of York Region Police on top of him, he was found guilty. Before sentence, he was diagnosed with. AIDS.What happened to him after, I do not know.
Throughout the trial his mother and sister ,also small people, were in attendance. They did not
understand English well and gave all the appearance of clinging to each other, scared and bewildered.
My heart went out to them and their unfortunate man-child. The odds were stacked against him. He never had a chance.
Like most of my posts ,this one took off on it’s own direction .I will get back to the one intended but
for now , this sad and catastrophic little tale ends here.
Friday, 4 October 2019
NOT AS GOOD AS THE BEST NOR BETTER THAN THE REST
Union leaders are paid executive salaries. They have to be elected. The more successful they are in bargaining ,the more likely to be re-elected. The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) is a powerful union.Municipal employers cower before their power. They have however come up with an option to bargaining in good faith. CUPE and the education workers bargaining unit has fallen into the trap...perhaps unwitting... perhaps not.
Education workers have voted to strike. Boards of Education have declared war. All services will be withheld and schools will close. TEACHERS WILL LIKELY CONTINUE TO BE PAID ACCORDNG TO THEIR CONTRACT. Education Boards couldn’t do that with teachers but they can with clerical workers and janitorial employees. Their work can be contracted out.
The harsh reality is ,when teachers’ bargaining is successful less is left for lesser workers.
Since the Province took financial responsibility for education Board budgets are
subject to Provincial authority. Payroll is 75% of most public service budgets.therefore any
effort to control costs must focus thereon.
Since the teachers union , or professional association as they like to be known, gets the lion’s share, less is left. for lesser employees.if ghe strike , Boards can blame the union for closing schools. To achieve savings required by their Provincial masters, the services can be contracted out. Public sympathy for education workers is unlikely. Everyone doesn’t understand a school is a community.
CUPE is a powerful union but it’s future is not secure. With no new hires and retirements not
Replaced, membership will be reduced over the long term and bargaining units will lose their effectiveness.Management would always prefer not to have to deal with a union.On the one hand. unions bargain hard ,on the other, politicians mm. like to be seen as the good guys.
This morning, a headline informed us Ontario students up to Grade 5 are reading below Grade level. It’s the one subject essential to teach. Students can find everything they need to know from a computer . First they need to know how to read.
Most people recognize taxes are necessary to pay for services. They do not begrudge paying those who provide the service reasonable compensation. It’s when the service is not up to the standard they expect....that’s when they begrudge paying the bill.
Nor do they understand the difference between being a contract worker and a member of the family.
Education workers have voted to strike. Boards of Education have declared war. All services will be withheld and schools will close. TEACHERS WILL LIKELY CONTINUE TO BE PAID ACCORDNG TO THEIR CONTRACT. Education Boards couldn’t do that with teachers but they can with clerical workers and janitorial employees. Their work can be contracted out.
The harsh reality is ,when teachers’ bargaining is successful less is left for lesser workers.
Since the Province took financial responsibility for education Board budgets are
subject to Provincial authority. Payroll is 75% of most public service budgets.therefore any
effort to control costs must focus thereon.
Since the teachers union , or professional association as they like to be known, gets the lion’s share, less is left. for lesser employees.if ghe strike , Boards can blame the union for closing schools. To achieve savings required by their Provincial masters, the services can be contracted out. Public sympathy for education workers is unlikely. Everyone doesn’t understand a school is a community.
CUPE is a powerful union but it’s future is not secure. With no new hires and retirements not
Replaced, membership will be reduced over the long term and bargaining units will lose their effectiveness.Management would always prefer not to have to deal with a union.On the one hand. unions bargain hard ,on the other, politicians mm. like to be seen as the good guys.
This morning, a headline informed us Ontario students up to Grade 5 are reading below Grade level. It’s the one subject essential to teach. Students can find everything they need to know from a computer . First they need to know how to read.
Most people recognize taxes are necessary to pay for services. They do not begrudge paying those who provide the service reasonable compensation. It’s when the service is not up to the standard they expect....that’s when they begrudge paying the bill.
Nor do they understand the difference between being a contract worker and a member of the family.
Thursday, 3 October 2019
LOSS OF INNOCENCE
$83 million may be small change in the over-all OHIP budget but it’s surely worth saving.
The global briefing has details of services no longer to be covered by OHIP. They sound pretty sensible. I find it refreshing to find government reacting to the obvious. Doing what needs to be done. It’s what I expect from The Honourable Christine Elliott, Minister of Health. It should be regarded as politically astute. We will soon see how the Toronto Star uses it to beat up on Doug Ford.
I stopped reading the Star a long time ago. After the Globe and Mail lowered their standards to compete with the Toronto Sun, I gave up that newspaper as well. Time was I couldn’t start my
day until I’d read the Globe, minus the Sports section. The same carrier delivered it for years
by 6 am. Until he left to go to university I imagine. I never did read Conrad Black’s publication.
I missed the newspapers twice a day. Like I missed being a practising Catholic. Now with social media,excerpts from the newspapers come my way regularly. I never will stop being a Catholic. Everything I am is guided by my faith.
Blog writing was not a feature when I stopped “practising”. I’m not sure I would have confided my
reasons but certain episodes are still stark.
An Aurora youth received a car on a birthday. . He already had his driver’s licence. On the next
Friday evening he drove out of St John’s Sideroad straight on to Yonge Street, and into the path
of a Greyhound bus. Three friends were in the car with him and an opened case of beer. More likely he was simply unfamiliar with the intersection.
He was killed and he wasn’t the only one. They were everybody’s kids.
At the funeral Mass, the parish priest announced the boy was in purgatory, an intermediary
place of punishment by fire for sins committed in one’s lifetime.
Grieving parents in the front pews were possibly hoping for solace but more likely still in a fog
of disbelief.
Mentally, I reeled.
Years later, after his retirement, a new church was built. A parish council was elected.
They made a video of the Holy Family. In Catholic terms, Joseph, Mary and Child, born of
the Virgin. Midnight Mass was a ritual I could not surrender. The Christmas Miracle,
the quietness of the hour, the stars in the sky, all served to hold me enraptured.
The Church was beautiful, the congregation open and ready for a heartfelt, lyrical sermon
to suit the occasion.
The priest sat behind the altar, hands folded in his lap and the congregation watched a video made by the Parish Council. He wasn’t even watching it with us.
I can watch a video at home. I could probably watch Midnight Mass in a Cathedral in Rome on
VISION TV. It’s not my preference. I’ve been robbed.
That priest left the Parish eventually, under a cloud.
The congregation lost another new priest...his parish was taken from him because he used funds as directed by their donor. No amount of petitioning changed the minds of Chancellory in Toronto. They lost a priest. A young man grew who grew up in Newmarket and was loved by his congregation.
Women are not the only ones shortchanged by Institution Church.
Nor are politicians the last ones who do not understand the limits to power and authority.
The global briefing has details of services no longer to be covered by OHIP. They sound pretty sensible. I find it refreshing to find government reacting to the obvious. Doing what needs to be done. It’s what I expect from The Honourable Christine Elliott, Minister of Health. It should be regarded as politically astute. We will soon see how the Toronto Star uses it to beat up on Doug Ford.
I stopped reading the Star a long time ago. After the Globe and Mail lowered their standards to compete with the Toronto Sun, I gave up that newspaper as well. Time was I couldn’t start my
day until I’d read the Globe, minus the Sports section. The same carrier delivered it for years
by 6 am. Until he left to go to university I imagine. I never did read Conrad Black’s publication.
I missed the newspapers twice a day. Like I missed being a practising Catholic. Now with social media,excerpts from the newspapers come my way regularly. I never will stop being a Catholic. Everything I am is guided by my faith.
Blog writing was not a feature when I stopped “practising”. I’m not sure I would have confided my
reasons but certain episodes are still stark.
An Aurora youth received a car on a birthday. . He already had his driver’s licence. On the next
Friday evening he drove out of St John’s Sideroad straight on to Yonge Street, and into the path
of a Greyhound bus. Three friends were in the car with him and an opened case of beer. More likely he was simply unfamiliar with the intersection.
He was killed and he wasn’t the only one. They were everybody’s kids.
At the funeral Mass, the parish priest announced the boy was in purgatory, an intermediary
place of punishment by fire for sins committed in one’s lifetime.
Grieving parents in the front pews were possibly hoping for solace but more likely still in a fog
of disbelief.
Mentally, I reeled.
Years later, after his retirement, a new church was built. A parish council was elected.
They made a video of the Holy Family. In Catholic terms, Joseph, Mary and Child, born of
the Virgin. Midnight Mass was a ritual I could not surrender. The Christmas Miracle,
the quietness of the hour, the stars in the sky, all served to hold me enraptured.
The Church was beautiful, the congregation open and ready for a heartfelt, lyrical sermon
to suit the occasion.
The priest sat behind the altar, hands folded in his lap and the congregation watched a video made by the Parish Council. He wasn’t even watching it with us.
I can watch a video at home. I could probably watch Midnight Mass in a Cathedral in Rome on
VISION TV. It’s not my preference. I’ve been robbed.
That priest left the Parish eventually, under a cloud.
The congregation lost another new priest...his parish was taken from him because he used funds as directed by their donor. No amount of petitioning changed the minds of Chancellory in Toronto. They lost a priest. A young man grew who grew up in Newmarket and was loved by his congregation.
Women are not the only ones shortchanged by Institution Church.
Nor are politicians the last ones who do not understand the limits to power and authority.
Wednesday, 2 October 2019
LIES,LIES,MULTIPLE LIES AND OTHER DISTORTIONS
CNN knows they are lying. They keep a running tally .
SO WHY GIVE THEM A PLATFORM FOR LIES.
‘’When muck is thrown , some of it always sticks” That was one of the first of many wise old political sayings I learned soon after my election and it was directed at me. IT MADE ME STOP AND THINK. It was simple ,obvious and sensible..
Most people are honest and straightforward and expect the same from others. If they see something in print , hear it in the media, or from a Mayor, Prime Minister or President, they don’t even wonder about the veracity.
If you pay attention people convey their feelings Listening is the difference between one who serves and one using elected office to promote their own interest.
I was asked today what I thought about the Federal election. I believe the Conservative and Liberals , will split the main vote. The NDP will go up in smoke.THE Green Party will hold the balance and governing will be near to impossible. A second election held shortly after will change nothing.We will have reached a stalemate. Not unlike Netenyahu in Israel.
I’ve been taking a beating from the Indigenous People lobby for daring to suggest many of their children are not better off in parental care than in a government institution.
I am accused of being ignorant and that’s true to a degree. If non-Indigenous children are
abused or neglected, Children’s Aid will take the children. It’s not the best for the kids. good. But
Sometimes it is the only option.
One of my critics prays that despite the efforts of Evelyn the Infidel Indigenous children will never be taken from parents again. Bu it is happening in the here and now. At entry points on the American border with Mexico, children are being taken from their mother’s arms and placed in cages.
SOMETIMES IGNORANCE IS SHARED.
The issue of clean water in Reserves has came up a the list of complaints.Muncipalities have clean water and government pays for it . Government should pay for it on Reserves as well.
That’s wrong but it’s not corrected.
Government does not pay for our clean water.We do.Our homes are metered and we pay for however much water we use. And we pay accordingly for soiled water to be treated. We pay for storm water ponds as well. I believe we are paying for new treatment plants on Lake Simcoe even though the Region will collect lot levies from developers when permits are issued.
This blog has been a bit of a zig-zag. Like my day that was.
SO WHY GIVE THEM A PLATFORM FOR LIES.
‘’When muck is thrown , some of it always sticks” That was one of the first of many wise old political sayings I learned soon after my election and it was directed at me. IT MADE ME STOP AND THINK. It was simple ,obvious and sensible..
Most people are honest and straightforward and expect the same from others. If they see something in print , hear it in the media, or from a Mayor, Prime Minister or President, they don’t even wonder about the veracity.
If you pay attention people convey their feelings Listening is the difference between one who serves and one using elected office to promote their own interest.
I was asked today what I thought about the Federal election. I believe the Conservative and Liberals , will split the main vote. The NDP will go up in smoke.THE Green Party will hold the balance and governing will be near to impossible. A second election held shortly after will change nothing.We will have reached a stalemate. Not unlike Netenyahu in Israel.
I’ve been taking a beating from the Indigenous People lobby for daring to suggest many of their children are not better off in parental care than in a government institution.
I am accused of being ignorant and that’s true to a degree. If non-Indigenous children are
abused or neglected, Children’s Aid will take the children. It’s not the best for the kids. good. But
Sometimes it is the only option.
One of my critics prays that despite the efforts of Evelyn the Infidel Indigenous children will never be taken from parents again. Bu it is happening in the here and now. At entry points on the American border with Mexico, children are being taken from their mother’s arms and placed in cages.
SOMETIMES IGNORANCE IS SHARED.
The issue of clean water in Reserves has came up a the list of complaints.Muncipalities have clean water and government pays for it . Government should pay for it on Reserves as well.
That’s wrong but it’s not corrected.
Government does not pay for our clean water.We do.Our homes are metered and we pay for however much water we use. And we pay accordingly for soiled water to be treated. We pay for storm water ponds as well. I believe we are paying for new treatment plants on Lake Simcoe even though the Region will collect lot levies from developers when permits are issued.
This blog has been a bit of a zig-zag. Like my day that was.
Monday, 30 September 2019
“FASTEN YOUR SEAT BELTS. IT’S GOING TO BE A BUMPY RIDE.
Global News briefing has a story today about the Liberal Leader being in the Provincial Premier’s backyard in Mississuaga on Sunday. He was taking shots at Ontario’s education policies . Doug Ford is everybody’s target for abuse. But Mississauga is not his backyard.
Mississuaga is Hazel McCallion’s back yard, front and side yards as well. Mississuaga is where rusty half-built ,gas -fired generating plants are testament to the power of Hurricane Hazel., AKA Queen of Sprawl in the development industry.
Hazel persuaded weak-kneed Dalton McGuinty to cancel rock firm contracts , signed by Hydro 1 ,on the eve of a Provincial election. just as she persuaded him to close coal-fired generators in favour of natural gas fire generators on the eve of a previous election...just as she persuadedvoters to chose Bonnie Crombie to replace her when she finally gave up the Chain of Offuce but not the power, in the city’s election.
Location is of no significance for an attack on Doug Ford. If the man took a miraculous stroll on Lake Ontario , Toronto media would not acknowledge prowess. And he’s not likely to do that any time soon.
DOUG FORD IS NOBODY’S IDEA OF A SKILLED POLITICIAN ...NEITHER IS JUSTIN TRUDEAU.
The Global briefing makes reference to vague statistics from various communication firms. We don’t
know them or their main client or if they are Liberal operations set up specially for the Federal election, Nobody is telling us.
Reference is made to statements from education workers about 10,000 teaching jobs being lost under
Ford’s education policies. Last figures I heard for immigration into the GTA area was 250,000 a year.
People are still coming to Ontario from every other Province in Canada hoping for employment.
It means more children in classrooms , more schools. More teachers and support workers, not
10,000 less. No way, Jose.Those figures cannot be correct.
What we do expect from a union is willingness to use students to gain their own ends. At the same time, the more money going in to teachers pockets, the.less left for everyone else including less classroom time for students.
At the same time, the more access students have to search engines in computers, the less time
needed to study the subject. As teachers reduce the subjects they choose or need to teach, the
question that creeps to mind ,,,,,,,,what is the future of schools as we know them.?
Maybe the only relevant future for teaching is designing computer programs. And how long before computers take over that chore as well.
I’ve seen amazing changes in my time. Instinct tells me there’s more to come.
I have seen unions with that kind of leverage, price their members out of the market.
Mississuaga is Hazel McCallion’s back yard, front and side yards as well. Mississuaga is where rusty half-built ,gas -fired generating plants are testament to the power of Hurricane Hazel., AKA Queen of Sprawl in the development industry.
Hazel persuaded weak-kneed Dalton McGuinty to cancel rock firm contracts , signed by Hydro 1 ,on the eve of a Provincial election. just as she persuaded him to close coal-fired generators in favour of natural gas fire generators on the eve of a previous election...just as she persuadedvoters to chose Bonnie Crombie to replace her when she finally gave up the Chain of Offuce but not the power, in the city’s election.
Location is of no significance for an attack on Doug Ford. If the man took a miraculous stroll on Lake Ontario , Toronto media would not acknowledge prowess. And he’s not likely to do that any time soon.
DOUG FORD IS NOBODY’S IDEA OF A SKILLED POLITICIAN ...NEITHER IS JUSTIN TRUDEAU.
The Global briefing makes reference to vague statistics from various communication firms. We don’t
know them or their main client or if they are Liberal operations set up specially for the Federal election, Nobody is telling us.
Reference is made to statements from education workers about 10,000 teaching jobs being lost under
Ford’s education policies. Last figures I heard for immigration into the GTA area was 250,000 a year.
People are still coming to Ontario from every other Province in Canada hoping for employment.
It means more children in classrooms , more schools. More teachers and support workers, not
10,000 less. No way, Jose.Those figures cannot be correct.
What we do expect from a union is willingness to use students to gain their own ends. At the same time, the more money going in to teachers pockets, the.less left for everyone else including less classroom time for students.
At the same time, the more access students have to search engines in computers, the less time
needed to study the subject. As teachers reduce the subjects they choose or need to teach, the
question that creeps to mind ,,,,,,,,what is the future of schools as we know them.?
Maybe the only relevant future for teaching is designing computer programs. And how long before computers take over that chore as well.
I’ve seen amazing changes in my time. Instinct tells me there’s more to come.
I have seen unions with that kind of leverage, price their members out of the market.
Saturday, 28 September 2019
POLITICAL RHETORIC GOES HAYWIRE
It was a struggle when I started writing the blog. Particularly on the edit. I would spend hours writing and re-writing and then somehow, I never knew how, I would lose the whole thing. If Heather Sisman hadn’t been there to sort things out, I might not have persisted. I hated trying to re-call what I’d written. But that too became part of the routine and I'm still nervous about editing.
Confining myself to the town’s affairs meant readership would not grow. Though when I was out and about people would come forward and urge me to keep writing. It made their day, they said. Sometimes I would post three times a day. I’m not sure what it did for readership but it was over-indulgence on my part.
I’ve cut down, almost to the bone, watching CNN because of repetition. For weeks at a time,
hammering away and I do mean hammering, at the same issue. My sense is they are more concerned
with defending themselves against criticism from the Oval Office Orangutang (OOO) than anything
the public needs to know.
It’s a mistake I don’t want to make. At the same time, the blog is an opinion piece so it’s hard to
avoid. I write the way I speak. I remember my first Letter to the Editor and how shocked I was by much more emphatic the written word is over the spoken.
This morning I note in The Auroran, both local Liberal candidates hanging their heads in shame over Boy Trudeau’s gaffe of decades ago in completing an Aladdin Halloween costume with a brown face. They are glad he apologized and are prepared to forgive him.
What a crock!!!
The term “brown face” is being interchanged with “ black face”. It’s sleight of hand to make a point. Black face was a music hall act of a white American singing group who coloured their faces in a way that offended the black community. It bespoke the times. It’s part of America’s shameful past.
Though it’s not yet completely healed... it is the past...
It bears no relationship to Justin Trudeau’s passion for authenticity in a Halloween costume.
I am offended that others are offended by Trudeau’s harmless piece of nonsense, when there are so
many more serious matters needing to be addressed.
Trudeau’s current sack cloth and ashes routine as Prime Minister of Canada pisses me right off.
Confining myself to the town’s affairs meant readership would not grow. Though when I was out and about people would come forward and urge me to keep writing. It made their day, they said. Sometimes I would post three times a day. I’m not sure what it did for readership but it was over-indulgence on my part.
I’ve cut down, almost to the bone, watching CNN because of repetition. For weeks at a time,
hammering away and I do mean hammering, at the same issue. My sense is they are more concerned
with defending themselves against criticism from the Oval Office Orangutang (OOO) than anything
the public needs to know.
It’s a mistake I don’t want to make. At the same time, the blog is an opinion piece so it’s hard to
avoid. I write the way I speak. I remember my first Letter to the Editor and how shocked I was by much more emphatic the written word is over the spoken.
This morning I note in The Auroran, both local Liberal candidates hanging their heads in shame over Boy Trudeau’s gaffe of decades ago in completing an Aladdin Halloween costume with a brown face. They are glad he apologized and are prepared to forgive him.
What a crock!!!
The term “brown face” is being interchanged with “ black face”. It’s sleight of hand to make a point. Black face was a music hall act of a white American singing group who coloured their faces in a way that offended the black community. It bespoke the times. It’s part of America’s shameful past.
Though it’s not yet completely healed... it is the past...
It bears no relationship to Justin Trudeau’s passion for authenticity in a Halloween costume.
I am offended that others are offended by Trudeau’s harmless piece of nonsense, when there are so
many more serious matters needing to be addressed.
Trudeau’s current sack cloth and ashes routine as Prime Minister of Canada pisses me right off.
Friday, 27 September 2019
THE STORY AS IT UNFOLDS
The $5 million contract let by the town in August for the Wild Life Refuge is what spurred me to write. the blog again. It’s taken till now to get back in the saddle
The main issue is cost and where funds are coming from?
First let me say, I’ve known David Tomlinson since weeks of his arrival in Aurora. The Wild Life Refuge is his idea and his alone. It has taken decades for it to seem to have come to fruition. I was a member when he brought a video to Council to illustrate the merits. It represented seasons and hundreds of dawn-breaking hours to record nesting habits of birds in aparticular area.It was monumental. It was beautiful.
There were obstacles . Much of the land was in private hands. The ConservationAuthority did not and were not likely to approve damming the creek to create on-line ponds.Cost of the project would be prohibitive. That the area would be fenced to deny public access would not sell well.
The obstacles were huge. Aurora is urban with an urban population.
A phone call this morning establishes though the contract has been awarded the problems remain.the same.On line ponds are not approved by the Conservation Authority. Cut -and - fill to permit an offline pond is still not resolved. . Trails and boardwalk are being constructed as we speak...so to speak.People and their dogs will have access . Ground nesting birds will not be protected. Extinct species will not return..
BOARD WALKS AND TRAILS MAKE FENCING REDUNDANT.
$5 MILLION DOLLARS ARE COMMITTED ...$1MILLION A YEAR FOR EACH OF FIVE YEARS...TO CREATE A WILD LIFE REFUGE WHICH SHALL NOT BE..
The money is coming from Lot Levy Reserves. It’s a system instituted by the Province that allows a municipality to exact a fee for every permit issued to pay for increased demand for facilities. It must be reviewed every year . Master Plans for various facilities must also
be reviewed to establish need.
The town’s website has current particulars. Funds for the Refuge are being taken from lot levy reserves collected from development, other than residential, in lieu of funds for parkland.
Some years ago, when Canadian Tire was still on Yonge Street,they added a gardening centre, They paid a huge levy . In your wildest dreams you could not imagine the expansion increased demand for parkland, ice arenas, community centres, skateboard parks , firehalls or a Refuge for extinct birds.
Yet the town took it and tucked it away in a reserve fund . ..waiting for a purpose.
I think taking these feses is legalized theft.It shows complete disrespect to a taxpayer we are sworn to represent.
JUST BECAUSE WE CAN, DOESN’T MEAN WE SHOULD.
75% of public service budgets are payroll. When new facilities are built,they have to be staffed.
and maintained. Operating costs swell the annual tax bill.
PEOPLE ARE DRIVEN FROM THEIR HOMES.
Capital costs may becovered by lot levies
The main issue is cost and where funds are coming from?
First let me say, I’ve known David Tomlinson since weeks of his arrival in Aurora. The Wild Life Refuge is his idea and his alone. It has taken decades for it to seem to have come to fruition. I was a member when he brought a video to Council to illustrate the merits. It represented seasons and hundreds of dawn-breaking hours to record nesting habits of birds in aparticular area.It was monumental. It was beautiful.
There were obstacles . Much of the land was in private hands. The ConservationAuthority did not and were not likely to approve damming the creek to create on-line ponds.Cost of the project would be prohibitive. That the area would be fenced to deny public access would not sell well.
The obstacles were huge. Aurora is urban with an urban population.
A phone call this morning establishes though the contract has been awarded the problems remain.the same.On line ponds are not approved by the Conservation Authority. Cut -and - fill to permit an offline pond is still not resolved. . Trails and boardwalk are being constructed as we speak...so to speak.People and their dogs will have access . Ground nesting birds will not be protected. Extinct species will not return..
BOARD WALKS AND TRAILS MAKE FENCING REDUNDANT.
$5 MILLION DOLLARS ARE COMMITTED ...$1MILLION A YEAR FOR EACH OF FIVE YEARS...TO CREATE A WILD LIFE REFUGE WHICH SHALL NOT BE..
The money is coming from Lot Levy Reserves. It’s a system instituted by the Province that allows a municipality to exact a fee for every permit issued to pay for increased demand for facilities. It must be reviewed every year . Master Plans for various facilities must also
be reviewed to establish need.
The town’s website has current particulars. Funds for the Refuge are being taken from lot levy reserves collected from development, other than residential, in lieu of funds for parkland.
Some years ago, when Canadian Tire was still on Yonge Street,they added a gardening centre, They paid a huge levy . In your wildest dreams you could not imagine the expansion increased demand for parkland, ice arenas, community centres, skateboard parks , firehalls or a Refuge for extinct birds.
Yet the town took it and tucked it away in a reserve fund . ..waiting for a purpose.
I think taking these feses is legalized theft.It shows complete disrespect to a taxpayer we are sworn to represent.
JUST BECAUSE WE CAN, DOESN’T MEAN WE SHOULD.
75% of public service budgets are payroll. When new facilities are built,they have to be staffed.
and maintained. Operating costs swell the annual tax bill.
PEOPLE ARE DRIVEN FROM THEIR HOMES.
Capital costs may becovered by lot levies
Wednesday, 25 September 2019
I KNOW WHERE THE MISTAKES ARE
My grandson Aaron found the right keyboard to use with the Ipad. His sister Robyn found a small
tray table that sits on my walker while I sit on the reclning chair that raises me to a standing position if I need it. Sometimes I don’t. And when I don’t....I don’t .
Both hands are free to tap the letters and it has almost , once again, become a mindless exercise.
There are still some tricky bits. Editing still presents some difficulty but it will come with practice.
There are a few corrections needed at the end of the previous post.
I will fix them to-morrow. I just wanted you to know....that I know....they are there .
tray table that sits on my walker while I sit on the reclning chair that raises me to a standing position if I need it. Sometimes I don’t. And when I don’t....I don’t .
Both hands are free to tap the letters and it has almost , once again, become a mindless exercise.
There are still some tricky bits. Editing still presents some difficulty but it will come with practice.
There are a few corrections needed at the end of the previous post.
I will fix them to-morrow. I just wanted you to know....that I know....they are there .
Tuesday, 24 September 2019
PEOPLE ARE CRITTERS TOO
My backyard is 63ft wide by50ft deep. I installed a pool when my children were young. It measures 32ft long by 16ft wide. A concrete deck ,probably 2ft wide surrounds the pool.I have a 12+ft square deck. What’s left has grass and perennials ,cedar hedging and spruce trees grown to substantial height.
The subdivion was built on farmland. There was no vegetation on the property other than on the banks of a creek that runs through. Case Woodlot is nearby and the Salamander Pond. Within two minutes of the front door, in whatever direction, we were in the country, surrounded by farm fields.
If homes disturbed the wildlife, it was long gone by the time we arrived.
It’s not like that any more. Subdivision housing surrounds us though Case Wood lot and the Salamander Pond remains. Fields still sweep upwards, mostly green, on the other side of Bathurst Street. It’s not unusual to see a hawk perched on hydro wires looking out over the fields for prey. I saw a Baltimore Oriole on Henderson Drive years ago. It flew in front of the car. Another time, a huge snowy owl swept silently down past and disappeared into the darkness like an apparition.
On a different occasion, in the dusk, I caught sight of an animal on the road and thought it was a pretty tall hound dog . Then I realized ....it was a deer. Once I saw a family of guinea hens crossing the road.I can’t explain the excitement I feel at the rare sight of the creatures that share our space.
Years have passed and we hear from new residents there should be no more development in Aurora.Now they’re here and we should lock the door and throw away the key. We are destroying wild life habitat ,they tell us and contributing to climate change.
In the meantime, all over town old lots are being acquired, modest homes demolished and massive mansions replace them. They cover half the lot as opposed to 25% .They tower over neighbouring bungalows. They are three times the size any family needs...they consume three times the energy to maintain...Ceilings are two storys high in reception areas...staircases are majestic, bathrooms number at least three and storage space for possessions is more than for a small retail store. Heating, cooling, cleaning ,lot coverage ...everything about them consumes many times the energy needed for human habitat.
But...to get back to the intended theme of this post...wild life habitat. My lot ...one of 750 ...as described above, was originally farm land. No trees were removed. No wild life displaced. My small space provides shelter and sustenance to rabbits, racoons ,black , grey and red squirrels, skunks and chipmunks who come right up to my patio doors to peer in and spy upon me.
Cardinals have lived in my cedar hedge for two decades. Black cap chickadees, yellow finches, robins, blue jays and once a huge grey hawk in my maple tree with ruffed feathers on his legs ,down that looked like pyjamas. And woodpeckers, black and white with a red streak on their heads tapping on old bramches that have loost their bark. I never knew of the variety of sparrows until they came
to live in my garden.
I went to a party on Saturday night. One of the guests teaches horticulture to high school students in Halton Region. He told me David Suzuki has put out a paper that claims if everyone who has a
yard, no matter how small, planted a hospitable environment for wild life ,we could bring back
species thought to be extinct for numbers of years.
I know it’s true. I’ve done it without planning it. I have a pair of mallard ducks that land on my covered pool in the Spring. And singing frogs and croaking bull frogs and redwing blackbirds sometimes in the spring. Sometimes doves, in flight for days will come down to rest on the warm stones that define the flowerbeds from the grassy area.They travel in pairs,one will nestle to rest while the other stands watch.
I know things about the habits of birds and I have a veritable aviary in my own backyard. And I
just stumbled into it
The subdivion was built on farmland. There was no vegetation on the property other than on the banks of a creek that runs through. Case Woodlot is nearby and the Salamander Pond. Within two minutes of the front door, in whatever direction, we were in the country, surrounded by farm fields.
If homes disturbed the wildlife, it was long gone by the time we arrived.
It’s not like that any more. Subdivision housing surrounds us though Case Wood lot and the Salamander Pond remains. Fields still sweep upwards, mostly green, on the other side of Bathurst Street. It’s not unusual to see a hawk perched on hydro wires looking out over the fields for prey. I saw a Baltimore Oriole on Henderson Drive years ago. It flew in front of the car. Another time, a huge snowy owl swept silently down past and disappeared into the darkness like an apparition.
On a different occasion, in the dusk, I caught sight of an animal on the road and thought it was a pretty tall hound dog . Then I realized ....it was a deer. Once I saw a family of guinea hens crossing the road.I can’t explain the excitement I feel at the rare sight of the creatures that share our space.
Years have passed and we hear from new residents there should be no more development in Aurora.Now they’re here and we should lock the door and throw away the key. We are destroying wild life habitat ,they tell us and contributing to climate change.
In the meantime, all over town old lots are being acquired, modest homes demolished and massive mansions replace them. They cover half the lot as opposed to 25% .They tower over neighbouring bungalows. They are three times the size any family needs...they consume three times the energy to maintain...Ceilings are two storys high in reception areas...staircases are majestic, bathrooms number at least three and storage space for possessions is more than for a small retail store. Heating, cooling, cleaning ,lot coverage ...everything about them consumes many times the energy needed for human habitat.
But...to get back to the intended theme of this post...wild life habitat. My lot ...one of 750 ...as described above, was originally farm land. No trees were removed. No wild life displaced. My small space provides shelter and sustenance to rabbits, racoons ,black , grey and red squirrels, skunks and chipmunks who come right up to my patio doors to peer in and spy upon me.
Cardinals have lived in my cedar hedge for two decades. Black cap chickadees, yellow finches, robins, blue jays and once a huge grey hawk in my maple tree with ruffed feathers on his legs ,down that looked like pyjamas. And woodpeckers, black and white with a red streak on their heads tapping on old bramches that have loost their bark. I never knew of the variety of sparrows until they came
to live in my garden.
I went to a party on Saturday night. One of the guests teaches horticulture to high school students in Halton Region. He told me David Suzuki has put out a paper that claims if everyone who has a
yard, no matter how small, planted a hospitable environment for wild life ,we could bring back
species thought to be extinct for numbers of years.
I know it’s true. I’ve done it without planning it. I have a pair of mallard ducks that land on my covered pool in the Spring. And singing frogs and croaking bull frogs and redwing blackbirds sometimes in the spring. Sometimes doves, in flight for days will come down to rest on the warm stones that define the flowerbeds from the grassy area.They travel in pairs,one will nestle to rest while the other stands watch.
I know things about the habits of birds and I have a veritable aviary in my own backyard. And I
just stumbled into it
Friday, 20 September 2019
TAP...TAP...TAP ...WITHOUT A SOUND
I’m still practising. Reaching down for whatever might be lurking
just below the surface of my mind. This may not get published because
I’m still groping and no-one is here to help but I find that’s the
best way. I’m forced to study the keys and repeat things. Just don’t
go away. I will soon get up to speed and into the meat of things. There’s a couple of promising nice mixed metaphors and i just found the key that moves
me forward along the line without obliterating what I just wrote.
Bear with me please. Don’t ever leave me I need to do it to get back into the swing of it.
I’ve been writing for more than eighty years. Starting with letters, written by hand of course. I’ve wondered why my bent was not recognized and encouraged. Then realized it was. When my brother’s plane didn’t return from a bombing raid, he was reported missing. I was assigned to write to newspapers for particulars every time we read of airmen in a dinghy being plucked from the ocean. When the war ended and we heard from the father of a flight crew survivor who had been a prisoner of war, that my brother had been killed, I wrote to the War Office to inform them. Whereupon they promptly sent back the information...in a blue-banded telegram. It signified urgency, they were informing us that he had been killed.
Last week someone posted an old Scottish class photo on line. There were forty students in the photo.Today’s teachers think twenty-four students are too many. They are not even teaching them cursive writing and if comments made in social media are an indication, English grammar is a lost art also.
When we came to Canada, there were three Toronto daily newspapers and a section for Letters To the Editor. I took to that like a duck to water. It evolved to a weekly column in the Aurora Banner. The editor was patient and instructive. I learned. I did some reporting.
During...before...and after.... I became involved in politics and my education broadened enormously. NO college or university can teach what there is to learn in politics.
At seventy-five, after a fourteen year absence, I put my name forward again and was re-elected and served three more four year terms. During which time social media presented. To the consternation of some, the delight of many and with the help of Heather Sisman, a young friend at a loose end, I published a blog.
Never, in a million years could I have ever imagined the opportunity. Without really meaning to, I stopped writing posts and took to commenting on Facebook instead. It’s less work. More casual. But the current state of politics in Canada, from top to bottom is lamentable.
It wasn’t always thus.
I am forever grateful for the opportunities I have received.
The Blog is payback.
Bear with me please. Don’t ever leave me I need to do it to get back into the swing of it.
I’ve been writing for more than eighty years. Starting with letters, written by hand of course. I’ve wondered why my bent was not recognized and encouraged. Then realized it was. When my brother’s plane didn’t return from a bombing raid, he was reported missing. I was assigned to write to newspapers for particulars every time we read of airmen in a dinghy being plucked from the ocean. When the war ended and we heard from the father of a flight crew survivor who had been a prisoner of war, that my brother had been killed, I wrote to the War Office to inform them. Whereupon they promptly sent back the information...in a blue-banded telegram. It signified urgency, they were informing us that he had been killed.
Last week someone posted an old Scottish class photo on line. There were forty students in the photo.Today’s teachers think twenty-four students are too many. They are not even teaching them cursive writing and if comments made in social media are an indication, English grammar is a lost art also.
When we came to Canada, there were three Toronto daily newspapers and a section for Letters To the Editor. I took to that like a duck to water. It evolved to a weekly column in the Aurora Banner. The editor was patient and instructive. I learned. I did some reporting.
During...before...and after.... I became involved in politics and my education broadened enormously. NO college or university can teach what there is to learn in politics.
At seventy-five, after a fourteen year absence, I put my name forward again and was re-elected and served three more four year terms. During which time social media presented. To the consternation of some, the delight of many and with the help of Heather Sisman, a young friend at a loose end, I published a blog.
Never, in a million years could I have ever imagined the opportunity. Without really meaning to, I stopped writing posts and took to commenting on Facebook instead. It’s less work. More casual. But the current state of politics in Canada, from top to bottom is lamentable.
It wasn’t always thus.
I am forever grateful for the opportunities I have received.
The Blog is payback.
Wednesday, 18 September 2019
A TRIAL RUN...BUT NOT REALLY
So ...I’m back...It’s going to take a while to get used to a keyboard again and in fact,
I’m not using it now. For a reason unbeknown to me the keyboard on my iPad is up and the new one
is not responding. I have a feeling my computer literacy is about to take a monumental curve ...
up ...or down...It will be a test of my ability.
Can’t find the font that changes the size of the print. Can’t take the cursor back to make a
correction. Spacing has changed and I don’t know why. I turned a button to 3 but that’s on the
new keyboard. Why would that affect the spacing on the iPad touchpad. I don’t even know the words
to describe things. I need to look again to see if there is an instruction manual. There is a
leaflet telling me how not to start a fire with the batteries...in four different languages.
My grandson Aaron found the keyboard for me. He is in his mid-twenties, married and an expectant
father. He has never known life without computers. Before he started school, his mother with other
mothers had to raise funds to buy computers. And then have a principal tell them how the funds were
to be used.
Aaron doesn’t need language,he just
lets his fingers do the tapping for him. But Aaron’s not here. Hunting and pecking is not good
enough. I just thought I would let you know I am up though not quite running on my blog once again.
Tuesday, 16 October 2018
OUT OF SIGHT.....OUT OF MIND
Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "ONE STEP FORWARD":
Oh please get back to writing. Your views/opinions will always be valued and well revieved by many! Name me one other person who has been involved longer than you in this Town? I loved reading about when you were a child as well. Those posts were delightful to read. :)
Posted by Anonymous to Our Town and Its Business at 15 October 2018
Oh please get back to writing. Your views/opinions will always be valued and well revieved by many! Name me one other person who has been involved longer than you in this Town? I loved reading about when you were a child as well. Those posts were delightful to read. :)
Posted by Anonymous to Our Town and Its Business at 15 October 2018
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
That's a nice warm welcome and I do have a little story to tell but not a childhood memory.
Initially, I supported the incumbent Mayor's election. I would never have endorsed a candidate without experience except for the appalling circumstances of the times. I was without option.
Having friends on council is not essential. Working in good faith together for the wellbeing of the community is and doesn't require personal friendship.
It doesn't demand agreement on issues either. Making friends is bonus.
Citizens' Awards night comes around early...normally a boisterous,cheerful evening.... recipients of all ages with families and friends and councillors making presentations. An invitation with program was always received.
Staff organized the event.
This Mayor's first awards night was different. Nothing prepared us.
No invitation was received. Only on arrival I realized it wasn't the norm.
Councillor Humphreys , formally gowned, was at the entrance to the council chamber ...greeting guests.
Councillors Gallo and Ballard were off to one side. I joined them to ask if they knew what was happening.
Ballard and myself went to the rear and found a staff person. He inquired and advised us to find ourselves a seat.
Then the evening revealed itself.
A few award recipients, were seated in the body of the chamber. Guests occupied the spectators gallery. Participating officials,staff and Councillor Humphreys stood under the video screens...prompt cards in hand.
On a signal it seemed, the Mayor made his entrance. It was an amazing sight. He lightly skipped down the side stairs in a pale grey swallow- tailed tuxedo.. like Fred Astaire... holding his prompt cards.
We warptched videos of nominations
The Mayor and Councillor Humphreys presented awards. Councillors present were not acknowledged.
When I was first elected ,I had everything to learn and no shortage of people to teach.everybody was helpful.
Formality and respect of administration toward council was marked. Protocol was paramount . It had nothing to do with personal status and everything to do with havingbeen elected. It was the office that mattered.
Population was 7,500. Residences, about 2,500. Clerk-treasurer, deputy-clerk,treasury clerk and clerk to the clerk formed the administration. Additional help was brought in for elections .
Until then, the term was one year . Mine was the first two year term and first annual budget to top a million. You bet we knew where every penny was spent.
On the night the budget was struck , Council, staff and reporters and anyone else present went upstairs to mark the most important event of the term. Everything flowed from the budget.
A pair of platters of dainty, fresh, sandwiches and sweet treats were served . The clerk-treasurer,
(He who held the keys)'opened the little liquor cabinet and glasses were raised.
The sense of an important task accomplished was nurtured among us.
That's how I found things in 1967.... Canada's Centennial Year.
It has changed over years and sooner and more obviously in the incumbent's first year .
Casting my mind back to library board days , I have realized there were signs.
In terms of town business, awards nights are not significant. No issue could or would be made. Recipients were pleased to be recognized.
It was already a split Council and went downhill from there.
Thursday, 27 September 2018
ONE STEP FORWARD
I didn't just stop writing.Several half-written blog posts are on hold,untitled and now out of date.
I've been commenting on Facebook.
Commenting is not the same. It doesn't require the same discipline.it's fast and lazy.
I play scrabble with the computer and stay at beginners level so I score hundreds ahead. I like that. Winning is better and I have control.
Friends have been urging me to get back to writing the blog. Because they told me so...many have looked forward to reading it every day.
Mostly, it was about Town business. Not being on Council now, means not knowing first-hand whereoff I speak.
Meetings are not televised any more...though I admit...I seldom watched. Didn't when I was at the table either. Listening once was enough.
Doug Ford's election has made Ontario politics interesting again. Can't really tell what's coming.
America's politics are in a dark place.
There's no shortage of stuff to write about. The challenge is choosing and getting back to the daily routine.
A commenter would like to know what I'm thinking about the municipal election. I do think about it but I doubt my views may be well received.
I do not endorse the incumbent for Mayor. Even now,at the end of a third term,his alignment with
the Mayor of Burlington on an issue for the election must have been a surprise to most voters.
He has never attempted to create a cohesive unit of council. He gave the impression he didn't see the need to associate. The staff arrangement of his predecessor seemed much to his liking...gave him the influence he wanted and continued to build.
Of the challengers, I think Tom Mrakas has most going for him. He puts his heart and soul into the job.
What he says he means.
My perspective, as might be expected, is different from Tom's. I believe the primary function of a council is efficient business management of services to property. Transferring land from
revenue to the liability side of the ledger, in any other business , is the road to bankruptcy with no
way back.
Cheerfully ushering in annual tax increases to make up the shortfall is not good stewardship. Nothing will ever persuade me otherwise.
Of course it's not as simple as that.
Nothing ever is.
It's one of the reasons I stopped writing.
And If I don't stop now this post now, it may never get posted either.
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