T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
989.1 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Alrighty, bye bye then. | Tue Mar 19 1996 16:25 | 5 |
| I don't agree.
These guys are not facing the reality of the situation. And, from where
I'm sitting, I haven't noticed a single thing, which tells me a lot.
They've been on strike for almost a month and I haven't noticed.
|
989.2 | | POLAR::KYOBE | No condition is permanent | Tue Mar 19 1996 22:49 | 3 |
| Its hard to notice due to the fact that" half_worktime=coffee::break".
|
989.3 | Let them stay on strike | KAOFS::O_DEBOER | | Wed Mar 20 1996 08:39 | 7 |
| I haven't noticed either except for the picketers I pass on the way
home. As far as I am concerned they need a reality check. No private
sector worker is getting the job security they are looking for. Its
time the Government does what the private sector has had to do for the
last 5 years.
Orval
|
989.4 | Little sympathy here either... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | Waiting for the Sun | Wed Mar 20 1996 13:05 | 6 |
|
As an Ontarian, keep saying to yourself, "I'm saving 10M$/day". These
people are single handedly reducing our deficit. I'll dodge a pothole
or two for awhile(!).
/PR
|
989.5 | | FSCORE::B_LEURY | | Wed Mar 20 1996 16:46 | 12 |
| A friend of mine is on the management team. When I asked him if about
the impact of the strike on him, he said that he and 4 other managers
were keeping up with the work. They have 65 people on strike!!!
He and the other managers were working about 10 hours overtime each
per week.
On the other hand, we might see some impact soon as I expect the price
of meat to increase because the meat inspectors are involved in the
strike. Several processing plants have had to shut their doors as a
result.
Bernie.
|
989.6 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Wed Mar 20 1996 17:31 | 11 |
| OK ... shows that we haven't heard all of the news ...
Seriously though Bernie, are these 5 people doing the work of the
65 on strike or are they just doing the absolutely essential work
(ie there is other work that their not worrying about) and also
what work is actually redundant /
What proportion is 13000 out of the entire Ontario civil service these
days ?
Stuart
|
989.7 | If only management could replace them | KAOFS::R_DAVEY | Robin Davey CSC/CTH dtn 772-7220 | Thu Mar 21 1996 08:38 | 16 |
| Obviously the writers of the previous replies haven't driven on
the Queensway lately. There are potholes there big enough to
swallow a Suzuki Swift whole.
What peeves me is not that management isn't repairing them but that
they aren't marking them with "bump ahead" and "bump" signs. Yesterday
my daughter counted hub caps along the centre divider on the westbound
lanes starting at Island Park Drive and quit counting when she got
to 70 and we weren't even at Pinecrest yet, a distance of about two
kilometers. I wonder how many were on the outside shoulder.
Robin
|
989.8 | | FSCORE::PAVEZKA | Why.....Why me!!! | Thu Mar 21 1996 09:56 | 3 |
| If it was Toronto, those potholes would probably be fixed right away!!
pete
|
989.9 | | TROOA::MCRAM | DEC: ReClaim TheName! | Fri Mar 22 1996 09:01 | 10 |
|
Yes, we fill them up with strikers.....
Actually the potholes are getting huge here too. There was one a week
or so back that swallowed a whole car. The elderly couple almost
drowned. (It was an undetected water main break).
Marshall
|
989.10 | compatibility | POLAR::KYOBE | No condition is permanent | Sat Mar 23 1996 01:11 | 9 |
| RE.5
Its high time we turned vegetarians afterall beef is transimiting
brain virus from cattle to humans"that's in the UK"may be will soon
reach canada.
RE.7
For the potholes;hear the price of 4x4,s is skyrocketin',my advise
is to adopt the third world way of driving.
|
989.11 | blurt | POLAR::WILSONC | strive to look better naked | Sat Mar 23 1996 20:42 | 22 |
| the more potholes the better. for a walker like myself, they (the
potholes) add an interesting topography to the landscape. not to
mention the plethora of irate drivers who go barreling down the road at
god knows howmany miles an hour and slam over a huge pothole, apply
their brakes as if they could still do something about the broken tie
rod that dangles like speghetti from a cold pot, then they get out of
their car, scream about the taxes they pay and how it's a sad state of
affairs when...of course i'm sympathetic and all, saying "too bad, and
really, you should sue the city it's there fault, really you had
nothing to do with it it's not your fault not at all, sue the city, man
it is your right, you pay enough taxes don't you, go gittim bigguy
sue them till they leak."
the driver then calms down and perhaps start to weep, thinking about
the increase in insurance, and quite possibly have take the bus to get
home, and they haven't been on a bus since they were kids, as if the
bus was only for kids, and then there is the denial stage: i can still
drive it, it is just the tie rod, so they get back in the car, feeling
the pride of ownership as they smooth their hands over the wheel and
slowly, lovingly, almost erotically turn the key to ignite their baby:
it doesn't start; the wailing begins and i have to leave because i cant
bear to see people in such anguish over such a silly little hole in the
road.
|
989.12 | rules of the game | POLAR::KYOBE | No condition is permanent | Sat Mar 23 1996 22:38 | 5 |
| >>the more pot holes the beter.for a walker like myself....<<
-:if you miss the ball,don't miss the leg.....
-:if you miss the pothole,don't miss the pedastrian....
|
989.13 | motorists are mostly wimpy | POLAR::WILSONC | strive to look better naked | Sun Mar 24 1996 05:38 | 4 |
| re: if you miss the pothole; don't miss the pedestrian.
i never met a motorist with enough guts to blatantly hit a pedestrian.
so what's yer point :)
|
989.14 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Alrighty, bye bye then. | Sun Mar 24 1996 21:14 | 5 |
| If you ask me, the problem is the new asphalt they started using, with
the rubber mixed in. It's supposed to expand and contract thus
preventing heaves. My observation is, it's a porous as hell and lasts
about six months. Go back to the cheap old hard stuff, it lasted
longer.
|
989.15 | 56.4 cents per litre. is it worth it? | POLAR::WILSONC | strive to look better naked | Sun Mar 24 1996 22:23 | 9 |
| there are some stretches along old highway 17 (north of superior) that
have been there for a very long time and not even weeds have got
through the hard ashphalt surface. so i agree with the last noter that
there is indeed a quality difference between the old and new ashphalt.
speed is an important factor in road deteriorization, perhaps
automobile manufacturers could limit all the vehicles produced to a
speed of 40 km/h. wouldn't that be great! save on gas too!! and ooooo
isn't gas getting a wee bit expensive?
|
989.16 | | POLAR::KYOBE | No condition is permanent | Mon Mar 25 1996 06:51 | 10 |
|
40km/hr!!!,that will be taking us back in the 1900's when the car
could only go 30km/hr. Soon you are gonna complain about the speed
of the pentium chip.
the price of gas depends on the daily day to day cost of oil
per barrel plus the canadian tax...try to befriend the middle east.
Why would a walker worry about speeding and gas prices anyway
|
989.17 | And thaks for the fish... | LEMAN::DZIALOWSKI | sharks gotta swim, bats gotta fly... | Mon Mar 25 1996 07:33 | 10 |
| Back to a really interesting question:
What are the most significant contributing factors to asphalt quality.
Is it the formulation ?
Is it the application process ?
The speed and weight limit it is subjected to ?
I personally think it is the color and the taste. But don't let this
prevent you from expressing a different opinion. I think, and I hope
the moderator will follow me on that, that we are breaking some new
(non-asphalted) ground and record in the category "the weirdest
sequence of replies ever..."
|
989.18 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Alrighty, bye bye then. | Mon Mar 25 1996 10:04 | 1 |
| Perhaps a flat tax will improve the pavement?
|
989.19 | No, but... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | Waiting for the Sun | Wed Mar 27 1996 09:51 | 4 |
|
A slightly cambered tax would improve the runoff.
/PR
|
989.20 | $.02 | TROOA::BROOKS | | Thu Mar 28 1996 17:14 | 4 |
| Once you drive in Michigan or NY state, you won't ever bitch about the
potholes in Ontario. bad there; good here - relatively speaking.
Besides, we should be building more rail lines anyways, like dem
Euro's.
|
989.21 | | FSCORE::B_LEURY | | Fri Mar 29 1996 09:38 | 8 |
| I81 through NY used to be bad. It's been fixed up. Try the 401 between
Prescott and Gananoque, pretty bad. Or the 17 between Carp and Antrim.
That stretch is incredibly hard on the back and neck.
Looking at your nodename, I can understand why you think that the 401 is
in good shape. For some reason, highways around Toronto are
in significantly better shape than anywhere else in the province. ;-)
|
989.22 | we're all in it together | POLAR::WILSONC | strive to look better naked | Fri Mar 29 1996 19:14 | 1 |
| walkers pay taxes for roads too. %*)
|
989.23 | | TROOA::TEMPLETON | Somedays are golden...and then:-) | Fri Mar 29 1996 21:36 | 13 |
| Heard on the way home that they have settled, then in the very next
breath, the announcer said government was at this moment, sitting down
to work out who was going to be let go.
The minister said " It's sad that we have to do this so soon after the
agreement is signed, but it has to be done"
Don't get me wrong, I think there are far more people working for the
government than is needed, I just think that statement is not going to
endear the powers to be with the rank and file.
joan
|
989.24 | Soon they'll have me riding a bike to work! | POLAR::MAHANEY | | Sat Mar 30 1996 02:48 | 18 |
| re. .16
The price of gas should not reflect the daily price of oil. Canada
and the federal gov. had (When?) a 90-day delay on gas prices.
Therefore the prices we are seeing are gas companies trying to make a
huge profit rather than the true reflection of the current gas prices.
What is inronic is that Petro-Canada seems to have fallen suit with the
other gas-stations. I thought the federal government bought British
Petrolem and turned it into Petro-Can for protection against
price-gouging we are seeing today. It seems we get the shaft from
everywhere in Canada.
Sean
PS Did you hear that Saudi Arabia is tax free? Imagine that, True
Freedom.
|
989.25 | sphinxter | POLAR::WILSONC | strive to look better naked | Sat Mar 30 1996 19:59 | 15 |
| RE. 989.16 POLAR::KYOBE
you seem to assume that progress means better, faster, harder, etc.
perhaps there is a place for slower speeds in a progressive
environment. i do not agree that it follows that since i would like to
see cars going a little slower, that therefore i want the whole world,
including pentium chips, to go slower. in fact, i would like to see
computer chips get faster and faster. cars are big, dirty, noisey,
expensive. there is no doubting the significance of the car to those of
us living in the 20'th century; they have changed the way people see
the world: expanded the world. cars have just about run out of
usefulness for us, that is what do most people do with their cars? They
drive to work and back, shopping and back, sunday dinner and back. How
many people can honestly say that there car is a positive source of
income and not a drain? IMNSHO cars are finished, used up; let's move
on. Remember horses? How is a car like a horse?
|
989.26 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Mon Apr 01 1996 14:21 | 17 |
| > The price of gas should not reflect the daily price of oil. Canada
> and the federal gov. had (When?) a 90-day delay on gas prices.
> Therefore the prices we are seeing are gas companies trying to make a
> huge profit rather than the true reflection of the current gas prices.
> What is inronic is that Petro-Canada seems to have fallen suit with the
> other gas-stations. I thought the federal government bought British
> Petrolem and turned it into Petro-Can for protection against
> price-gouging we are seeing today. It seems we get the shaft from
> everywhere in Canada.
PetroCan always seemed to be a market leader in pricing gas upwards for as
long as I can remember. Around us in Colorado, Texaco seem to hold that
honour. PertoCan wasn't bought to protect in price gouging that has gone
on for decades, but rather, to take part in it so Joe Public could feed the
tax coffers in a different way.
|
989.27 | wondering ? | TROOA::TEMPLETON | Oneortheother | Tue Apr 02 1996 00:03 | 10 |
| Is some one going to start a "Conspiracy" note in here now?
On the lighter side, I have never understood the wild price swings of
gas.
According to the people who should know, it should take a lot longer
for the barrel price to affect the price at the pumps than we see most
of the time.
joan
|
989.28 | Political Power starts with you! | POLAR::MAHANEY | | Tue Apr 02 1996 01:46 | 17 |
| re. -1
As I said before in a previous note, the Federal Government in
Canada put a 90-day moratoruim on gas prices. So when the price of
crude oil whent up last week, we should have seen the price increase in
June. The gas companies are just price gouging. I think the petrolem
sector weilds alot political power. Just look at the price-fixing
investigation in the Ottawa area, they fined only one gas station, thats
it.. Maybe a consumer group can rally the population again to start
boycotting certain gas companies. In a free market, competetion should
prevail, yet where is it? Today, I saw at least 10 stations with the
price of 57.4, is this competetion? or is it price gouging and fixing?
Regards,
Sean
|
989.29 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Tue Apr 02 1996 14:39 | 7 |
| Gas in Colorado goes up and down like a cycle ... When prices go up, I go
and buy gas at about $1 - 2 at a time ... gets the stations cheesed off!
The usual response is "is that ALLL???" I reply yup ... your price is too
expensive ... when it comes down to where it should be, I'll fill up!
Stuart
|
989.30 | | FSCORE::B_LEURY | | Tue Apr 02 1996 16:44 | 4 |
| How much is gaz in Colorado? $2 bucks here takes me to the next gaz
station.
Bernie.
|
989.31 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Tue Apr 02 1996 17:17 | 5 |
| > How much is gaz in Colorado? $2 bucks here takes me to the next gaz
> station.
Used to peak 1.199 for 4 litres ... now 1.299 for 4 litres
|
989.32 | TAXES! Grrrrrrrrrrrr! | POLAR::MAHANEY | | Wed Apr 03 1996 01:17 | 13 |
| Re. -1
We are paying $2.30 (give or take a penny) for 4 litres, and this
is with our precious after tax income (30 - 55% tax rate). As you can
see, I really hate taxes! actually I don't mind paying some taxes, but
I hate watching politicians squander our money.
Sean
LONG LIVE THE HARRIS GOVERNMENT!
|
989.33 | | FSCORE::B_LEURY | | Wed Apr 03 1996 12:11 | 5 |
| 1.29 per gallon is high compared to the Eastern states. I drove to
Florida three weeks ago and I paid from 1.22 to .95 (Georgia) for gaz.
The average price was about $1.05
Bernie.
|
989.34 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Wed Apr 03 1996 14:03 | 16 |
| >
> 1.29 per gallon is high compared to the Eastern states. I drove to
> Florida three weeks ago and I paid from 1.22 to .95 (Georgia) for gaz.
> The average price was about $1.05
>
> Bernie.
Your darned tootin' it's high. Colorado gas prices are usually amongst the
highest in the land.
Price fixing seems normal.
It's just like being in Ottawa!
Stuart
|
989.35 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Alrighty, bye bye then. | Wed Apr 03 1996 21:07 | 6 |
| Well, now that the strike is over, has anyone noticed an improvement in
government services?
It's obvious that there is an awful lot of waste here. 13,500 in cuts
really needs to happen. We can't pay all of these people to surf the
net and play solitaire anymore.
|
989.36 | Cut Them All & Start Over! | KAOFS::LOCKYER | | Thu Apr 04 1996 10:47 | 2 |
| I didn't notice a reduction in services while they were on strike....
|
989.37 | $ 2.30 ? that's cheap ! | JGODCL::CLEEUW | | Fri Apr 26 1996 02:59 | 13 |
| Re.31/32:
$2.30 per 4 litres !
You don't know how "lucky" you are.
Overhere in the Netherlands we pay some $1.65 per litre for gas and
$1.10 per litre for diesel oil (and of course most of this is tax).
Over the last 7 to 8 years prices of fuel have doubled.Wished may
income had changed that much aswell!
But one can also slow down a bit and drive some 60 miles instead of 75.
For me this has changed my fuel consumption with 10-15 % and I'm
driving more relaxed (most other people go much faster overhere on the
motorway - max speed is 75 miles) because one does not have to overtake
othere that much anymore .
Cees (who's traveling 100 miles a day to work and back home again).
|