T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1282.1 | Fire the Proof Reader | KNGBUD::B_SIART | THE/OWLS/ARE/NOT/WHAT/THEY/SEEM | Wed Nov 28 1990 09:05 | 15 |
|
I have also noticed some of these areas pointed out and wondered
whether they have taken the time to proof read this information
at all. One significant area that stood out was on page 4 of the
booklet. Its basically stating that a BAC of .01 or more is worse than
a BAC of .09 - .05. That alone clearly said to me that this thing was
hastily put out. Where as it should have stated that a BAC (Blood
Alcohol Concentration) of .1 is legally drunk and not the typographical
.01 as printed. Not a good publication if the facts aren't proof read.
Also in my copy on page 13 they even had to put a sticker for
section B. Another bad sign that this publication may contain more
errors not noticed on first reading.
B
|
1282.2 | They missed a killer drug | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Wed Nov 28 1990 09:54 | 13 |
| I had a different complaint about the booklet. I was glad to
see that it covered alcohol--which is an often ignored drug--
but was sorry to see that they didn't mention tobacco.
Tobacco has quite a bit in common with the drugs covered: it is
highly addictive, it can cause significant harm to a fetus when
used during pregnancy, use of it is restricted at work. It is
more addictive than almost all of the drugs they list and causes
more deaths than all of the drugs they listed combined. Tobacco
should have been covered first in the booklet.
B.J.
|
1282.3 | Can we really afford this??? | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Nov 28 1990 11:19 | 12 |
| The spelling, etc., errors are what happens when people who can't spell
rely entirely on spelling checkers. Some plain, old-fashioned proof
reading was obviously called for....too bad. Along the same lines, I
just got a copy of a very sensitive letter going out to some very
unhappy customers re one of our software products. It also has two
errors that a simple proof reading would have caught.
As for the booklet itself, mine is already in the circular file, as
I assume thousands of others also are. A very, very wasteful exercise
for a company which is supposed to be controlling unnecessary expenses.
Guess we'll never learn. (now, guess I'd better proof-read this
carefully, hmmmmm.......).
|
1282.4 | THANK You. | DPDMAI::EORDOGH | Imre Atilio Eordogh Teran.. Alias M | Wed Nov 28 1990 12:06 | 46 |
|
I just got the Drug Imformation Booklet in the mail. And the Only
thing that I have to say is that I'm Thankful to K.H Olsen, because we
must become aware that this DISease not only affects the person using, but
significant others - family, friends, co-workers.
I mention (Drug and Chemical Dependency as a DISease) because it is, just
like cancer or any destructive disease. Is chronis in nature, displays
progressive, that will lead to premature death unless the chemical intake is
stopp. One of the most crippling effects of the DISease of drug or chemical
dependency is that it makes the victim incapable of recognizing its presence.
.2 please forgive me but, I don't think Tabacco dependency should have
been coverd first, because we as a society know what tabacco can do.
Drug and Chemical dependency is a family DISease, its pass from generation
to generation. As I mention please forgive me but my suggestion is, that
you read or educate your self regarding this DISease.
And yes I talk from experience, because this DISease it completely shatter
7 years of my marriage. Ever since I learnwhat Chemical dependency can
do, I'm not only willing to learn more about it, but to help and support
others who are trying to find their way in.
For last I'm no longer afraid to tell the truth, and that truth is, because
of this DISease, I grew up in a very disfunctional family (Physically, Verbally
and Sexually abuse as a child. And today I'm grateful that I know the why of
that abuse. And I have forgive them, because they are suffering from
this DISease. As I share this I'm exposing my self to let others know
my secret. But I'm out of that closet, and its been bright ever since.
I thank you K.H Olsen, and to all of those who put together the Drug
Information Booklet.
To .3, All I read from you is remarks or misspell.. I wonder is we are
getting the real message of this Booklet.
Thanks,
Imre
"A survivor"
|
1282.5 | A Couple for the Road, hiccup... | RAVEN1::HARPER | | Wed Nov 28 1990 12:46 | 18 |
| I can live with the spelling errors...
What bothers me is the comment on p.4 immediately below the table:
[] A BAC of less than .05 -- Drive cautiously.
According to DECdib (DEC Drug Information Booklet--sorry I
couldn't resist) I can have three drinks before I go out and drive
'cautiously'. Now, I have never had one drink in my entire life, so I
can't comment intelligently, but I suspect 3 would put ME under the
table.
Suppose I am a truck driver for DEC. Do I now have a the company
consent via DECdib to "have a couple" before I start that long haul
into Maynard?
|
1282.6 | wake up and smell the coffee! | WJOUSM::GASKELL | | Wed Nov 28 1990 12:52 | 9 |
| The only thing the booklet said to me was "that some DECies in high
places haven't cottoned on that WE ARE IN THE MIDST OF HARD TIMES HERE
AT DEC! The government publish some good informational pamphlets on
drugs and addiction, so why did DEC go to the expense of reinventing the
wheel.
Wake up and smell the coffee people, we need decisive action,
management and leadership to get DEC through to better times, not
mounds of glossy paper.
|
1282.7 | | VCSESU::MOSHER::COOK | The Cookster! Film at 11. | Wed Nov 28 1990 13:11 | 7 |
|
re: .5
The table doesn't take in tolerance levels. It's just based on weight,
number of drinks, and time.
/prc
|
1282.8 | | URSIC::LEVIN | My kind of town, Chicago is | Wed Nov 28 1990 13:29 | 20 |
| re: .3
:
<< rely entirely on spelling checkers. Some plain, old-fashioned proof
<< reading was obviously called for....too bad. Along the same lines, I
:
<< errors that a simple proof reading would have caught.
:
<< Guess we'll never learn. (now, guess I'd better proof-read this
:
"Proofread" is one word (not two separate words nor a hyphenated word). Which
only goes to show how difficult it is to get all typos, etc. out of a simple
message. Frankly, I'm less bothered by typos in the booklet than in the
customer letter you mention.
Marvin-whom-a-secretary-once-called-"picky"-because-I-insisted-that-
she-correct-typos-in-a-letter-that-was-going-out-over-my-
signature
|
1282.9 | Maybe related to a Government requirement | VIA::CBRMAX::cohen | | Wed Nov 28 1990 13:42 | 7 |
|
While it was probably expensive, I think the booklet was part of Digital's
effort to respond to the "drug free" workplace initiative by the Government.
(i.e. drug education, drug treatment etc.). So if the alternative is this
type of education versus urine testing, Well....
Bob
|
1282.10 | so what is next? | MEMV02::STROLLO | | Wed Nov 28 1990 13:48 | 12 |
| I was happy to read and receive the booklet. I have a teen aged
son and another in his early 20's and while I have no evidence
that either is a substance abuser, they do occasionally use
some drug language which I don't understand. At least now I can
speak their lingo assuming the information is accurate. My older
son is a security person a UMass Amherst and has told me some
chilling tales of substance abuse on campus and the results of
same.
My guess is that this booklet is a prelude to actual drug testing
at Digital. I doubt very much it was distributed in lieu of same.
Ted
|
1282.11 | ...not me!!! | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Nov 28 1990 13:49 | 9 |
| DEC could'a got all the info they needed to people by referring them
to the government printing operation in Pueblo, Colorado...just like
the TV ads say, and completely free!!
Oh, BTW, just got a memo stating that we are 178M over BOD for Q2,
and discretionary spending is up by around 130% over same period
last year. We truly will never learn. Everyone thinks their little
project is an exception. Maybe that rumour going around about mega-
layoffs in January is so unrealistic after all.
|
1282.12 | "Common Net Names" table | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Wed Nov 28 1990 16:00 | 28 |
| I really enjoyed the "Common Street Names" column of the fold-out chart. Here's
the corresponding "Common Net Names" table:
NODE ADDRESS LOC CPU O/S TYPE SYS MGR DTN
ACID 44.0760 REO 01 F VS3000 VMS 4E HAY 0008303557
BONE 42.0151 REO 01 F VS2000 VMS 4E ECKLEY 0008304474
BOOZE 49.0207 MUH UVAX I VMS 4E ROTHER 0007564111
CACTUS 62.0513 ZKO 3 3 MAYFAI ULTRIX 4E DEANE 0003810803
COKE 20.0135 SGO 04 1 11/750 VMS 4E LUGO 0007212389
DLS 4.0508 LKG 02 2 VAXMAT MSDOS 4E SMITH 0002265337
GANJA 42.0498 REO 02 F UVAX/G VMS 4E PAVITT 0008306926
GRASS 41.0575 USH 8530 VMS 4E SMITH 0007814012
H 35.0289 OFO VS2000 VMS 4E HILLERICH 0002746565
HERB 36.0173 CYO VAX200 VMS 4E LENNIG 0004327632
HORSE 37.0451 DLB 5 3 UVAX/G VMS 4E REED 0000000000
JUICE 2.0217 ZKO 2 2 UVAX I UVMS 4E LEMEN 0003812263
JUNK 7.0470 MRO 1 3 UVAX I UVMS 4E FITE 0002977750
LADY 48.0755 GEO 03 0C VAX200 VMS 4E TAYLOR 0008214935
REDS 61.0232 ZKO 2 2 VS2000 VMS 4E KELLY 0003812507
RUSH 31.0596 TTB 1 6 VAX200 VMS 4E SERRA 0002641827
SMACK 31.0830 GSF 01 01 3500 VMS 4E FERLAN 0002644861
SMOKE 15.0018 CTS 1 1 3100 VMS 4E CLENDENIN 0002873264
SNOW 15.0144 APO 01 2 UVAX/G VMS 4E RODUTA 0002891302
SPEED 44.0772 REO 01 F7 VAX200 VMS 4E LIU 0008303454
STUFF 3.0598 MKO 01 02 VAXMAT MSDOS 4E POIRIER 0002643600
WEED 10.0822 UCP 3 DS3100 ULTRIX 4E MURPHY 0000000000
/AHM
|
1282.13 | the REAL BOONDOGGLE | KEYS::MOELLER | Forgot 2 pay my gravity bill again | Fri Nov 30 1990 12:59 | 20 |
| Every DIGITAL facility I've ever been in ALREADY has the same "Free
Drug Abuse Information" rack with 10-12 slots FILLED with glossy
brochures on all the favorite recreational drugs.. tobacco and alcohol
included. Why this Drug Information Booklet had to come out at this
time is beyond me. In fact, my dispersed unit was just denied permission
to meet (we only meet 2X per year) because of travel restrictions. And
then I get this kind of CRAP in the mail. If I can't travel to meet my
manager and my peers, then ALL Human Resource Classes and EAP better
get axed, too. Tell me how a class on the "Dynamics of Difference"
adds to our bottom line. (sorry, different topic/rathole)
Also, for a booklet purporting to discourage drug use, it describes
some of the effects in pretty positive terms, especially the
psychedelics. ".. feelings of esthetic delight, empathy, serenity, joy,
insight, eliminates anxiety and defensiveness, invites
self-exploration, feeling of relaxation and well-being, affectionate,
melts boundaries with others.." I could use some of the above in MY
life these days.
karl
|
1282.14 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Nov 30 1990 13:57 | 6 |
| Couldn't agree more, Karl. Apparently there is a crapola exemption
within DEC for this kind of junk. I think it's kind of the DEC
equivalent of being "Polically Correct". Some things are just
untouchable. In my opinion we should get rid of Management Education
(show me some results), EAP, Valuing whateverthehell, the AIDS Program
Office, and probably several dozen more boon-doggle operations.
|
1282.15 | RE: EAP | CVG::THOMPSON | Does your manager know you read Notes? | Fri Nov 30 1990 14:32 | 7 |
| Speaking for myself I believe EAP to be one of the most importent
benifits we have here. If you've never had need for it you may not
understand or appreciate it but I think we need it. It made a big
difference to me a number of years ago when I needed help with a
family situation and I'll back it to the wall.
Alfred
|
1282.16 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Nov 30 1990 15:12 | 49 |
| re .14
>> In my opinion we should get rid of Management Education
>> (show me some results), EAP, Valuing whateverthehell, the AIDS Program
>> Office, and probably several dozen more boon-doggle operations.
You have a right to your opinion, but your opinion scares me. Have you
talked with Digital employees who have been through drug and alcohol
rehabilitation and who are now clean and sober? That's often a direct
result of EAP intervention. Without EAP intervention (and AA) many of
those same people would probably eventually lose their jobs, and end up
on some kind of public assistance program, drinking and drugging
themselves to death. EAP helps get people into treatment, and helps
coordinate their return to work.
AA is a very powerful program, and EAP is a direct corporate conduit to
it. EAP has done a great deal of good work with managers to help them
identify employees with drug and alcohol problems so that they can take
some positive action with this type of poor performer.
By Valuing whateverthehell, you probably mean valuing differences. You
know, if we *practiced* the principles of valuing diversity - mostly 'live
and let live' - most of the valuing differences staff would probably be
delighted to move on to other kinds of work.
AIDS program office? I'd much rather know that a co-worker with AIDS
had a knowledgeable and trained support staff within the corporation.
He or she could probably get a great deal of necessary support by
picking up the phone and dialing a dtn, or via a network mailing list.
The program office can work closely with local DEC health centers and
outside medical personnel to provide the care needed for the employee
to continue as a productive worker. The program office can also help
manage some of the ignorance surrounding HIV and AIDS and provide
co-workers with answers to any questions about safety.
In a company this size, I think it would be foolish not to provide
support for people living with the disease. Again, if a cure is found
tomorrow, I'm sure DEC will be delighted to assist its HIV positive
employees in receiving treatment and close the office.
Holly
PS - Although it would be inappropriate to name names, I have first
hand experience with Digital employees who have benefited from all the
services I've described above and who are much more productive
employees today as a result.
|
1282.17 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Nov 30 1990 15:14 | 12 |
| Just got some mail about an Investment in Excellence Course. Teaches
really good stuff like:
The Human Thought Process
Conditioning
Self Image
Comfort Zones????
Goal Setting
Affirmative and Visualization Techniques
Only 850 bucks and four days out of work. Man, I can just see our
profitability turning around.
|
1282.18 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Fri Nov 30 1990 15:19 | 5 |
| .16 -- I couldn't agree more under normal circumstances. Our backs
are against the wall now, and we can't afford those luxuries. You
know, thousands of small companies with millions of employees somehow
manage to get by without these percs. These are tough times requiring
tough measures.
|
1282.19 | | STAR::HUGHES | You knew the job was dangerous when you took it Fred. | Fri Nov 30 1990 15:22 | 25 |
| re .12
Now you've done it. The node name police will have to get busy...
re general
My guess (and hope) is that this booklet is intended to show some
compliance with 'drug free workplace' requirements instead of testing.
It contains enough typos and outright mistakes to make its value
somewhat questionable. Even the comments on antihistamines and
decongestants are wrong (as an example of something easy to check).
re correction sticker
The difference between the original paragraph and the corrected one is
that the original included a sentence to the effect that interactions
with Health Services would treated in confidence. The sentence was
removed.
Maybe these things will be collectors' items in decade or so. Sort of
like the way people buy videotapes of "Reefer Madness" or "Hemp for
Victory" today.
gary
|
1282.20 | I agree! Its nice but... | PNO::HEISER | GTS � - $billions$ served! | Fri Nov 30 1990 16:29 | 7 |
| What does it cost to create something like this and send it to everyone
in the corporation?
Given our current financial status, was this really necessary? I'd
rather have bottled water!
Mike
|
1282.21 | A lot cheaper than company-wide random drug testing | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Nov 30 1990 19:44 | 6 |
| re .20
>was this really necessary?
To continue to deal with our largest customer (the U.S. Gummint) and gummint
contractors, yes.
|
1282.22 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Dec 03 1990 09:40 | 11 |
| re .21:
>
>>was this really necessary?
>
>To continue to deal with our largest customer (the U.S. Gummint) and gummint
>contractors, yes.
But surely the Feds would be just as happy if we set up racks with Gov't
Printing Office publications (or, if that wasn't good enough, mailed them
to all employees).
|
1282.23 | when will we get serious?? | ZIPLOK::SYSTEM | | Mon Dec 03 1990 14:02 | 32 |
| re .17
I've fought this battle along with some other courses like
"Becoming an everyday genius" with Jack Smith and I'm not sure
how far I got but compiled a list of such things and with some
simple mathematics discovered that we as a company spend some-
where in the vicinity of $100,000,000 per year on such things.
I sent it on to Mr. Smith for further review. The result was
each VP got a copy of my original note to him and finally got
a few organizations to to reply with about 20 pages of justification
of these sorts of courses. At least I tried. I figured we could spend
the money better on teaching folks how to program in C or other
types of courses that are more directly applicable to our core
business of computing. The $100,000,000 figure took into consideration
the amount of money (average fully loaded cost) spent by being away
from their work in addition to the actual cost of course and
materials etc. However, it's just not clear whether or not we ("DEC")
are willing to fight the battles that must be fought in order to turn
this thing around. Otherwise, these types of courses for example would
not exist or at least not fully funded by DEC right now. Would $100
million dollars fund approximatley 1000 people?? I hope I never see the
day where we lay off good hard working people before these types of
company funded programs are scrutinized extremely carefully. Somehow
paper clips and pencils and post-it's don't seem nearly as insidious...
sigh...
/ray.
|
1282.25 | That stuff was in the same category as heroin! | DEC25::BRUNO | Catcher in the Raw | Tue Dec 04 1990 20:18 | 5 |
| Well, one good use of the Drug Information Booklet is that it
alerts me that the Percodan my dentist prescribed (when he yanked my
wisdom tooth) could get me fired if I got picked for a urine test.
Greg
|
1282.26 | | STAR::HUGHES | You knew the job was dangerous when you took it Fred. | Wed Dec 05 1990 15:07 | 5 |
| True, but you could have learned that here as well (the topic of false
positives was discussed here some time back), without the expense
of a glossy brochure.
gary
|
1282.27 | | DEC25::BRUNO | Catcher in the Raw | Thu Dec 06 1990 09:53 | 5 |
| RE: .26
WHAT...and have DIGITAL spend money on a glossy NOTES conference?
GB
|
1282.28 | Comments to... | KALI::PLOUFF | Ahhh... cider! | Wed Dec 12 1990 11:54 | 3 |
| Since the booklet invites "comments and feedback," but gives no
indication where to write, one appropriate person would be:
Bruce Davidson, Corporate Director of EAP, PKO3-1/K44.
|
1282.29 | Why buy a cow when milk is free? | MARX::BAIRD | Not bad, 4 out of 6 | Mon Dec 17 1990 16:32 | 8 |
|
Last Friday my nine year old son brought home a "Drug Information"
booklet from school. It is published by the U.S. Govt. and is
available from the Printing Office in Pueblo, CO. I was wondering
how much the school paid for copies for every student, so I checked.
The booklet is free, in any quantity. The info appears to be as
good as that in the Digital publication - without the typos.
|
1282.30 | free? | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Wed Dec 26 1990 17:37 | 7 |
| re:-1
Nothing is free! Somebody is paying for those "free" gummint published
booklets. (guess who!) I would much rather see private purchase of such
things rather than public money being used.
Ken
|
1282.31 | Free? Close enough for govn't work... | ASDS::BAIRD_2 | CD = Real to Real | Tue Jan 01 1991 12:53 | 15 |
|
Ken,
The difference in cost between my son's drug info booklet from
the Government Printing Office and my copy of Digital's booklet
in terms of impact on MY POCKET and MY COSTS renders the use of
the term 'free' quite appropriate.
Consider what budget the manager of the DEC booklet consumed in
the creation of that 'resource.' Now consider how much of a budget
you or I would have consumed to furnish the GPO version.
And yes, this all begs the question that providing the booklet is
a necessary service.
J.B.
|
1282.32 | cost cutting by buying booklets? | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Wed Jan 02 1991 16:04 | 9 |
| I guess we're on the same track here. (maybe) The money budgeted for
the purchase of these booklets by DEC would simply go somewhere else
if those things weren't purchased.(probably somewhere that you or I
wouldn't notice too much)
If the gummint didn't print those booklets,the money would certainly go
somewhere else also in some barely visible form.(like buying a bunch of
$400 hammers)
Ken
|
1282.33 | cost cutting by not CREATING unnecessary booklets | MARX::BAIRD | Not bad, 4 out of 6 | Wed Jan 02 1991 19:20 | 21 |
|
My perspective - someone in Digital says we need to put a drug info
booklet into every employees hands. (Right or wrong that's the starting
point.)
The way Digital did it - use internal sources to design, layout and
print(maybe they were printed external) thousands of copies of a slick,
glossy, typo-loaded and somewhat questionctually, high expense
booklet. The cost to the company and hence to each of us - HIGH.
Now another way - drop a card to GPO, Colo. and request 100,000
coipes of their drug information booklet. They might want some
compensation but I know they've filled request for over 3,000 copies
at NO CHARGE. Now as a taxpayer I'll pay something for the costs, but
then so will every other taxpayer regardless of his/her company. Take
that up with your congressman. Digital's cost this way is a lot less
than reinventing the wheel in-house and we'd have a better booklet.
End of this rat hole pursuit. Happy holidays.
J.B.
|