dewline: Text: Education is Not a  Luxury!!! (education)

Noting a few other things for the record...

Starting with the city's announcement of an environmental assessment as a prelude to possibly extending the Confederation Line of the O-Train network to the Canadian Tire Centre(AKA Corel Centre AKA Palladium). If this goes all the way to actually building the tracks and running the trains, there'll be a lot of happier hockey and music fans in this city. Especially out here on the eastern end, owing to the current transit times via the 4xx-series bus routes that feed that stadium on game and concert nights. And even if the Ottawa Senators do end up moving from Kanata's Palladium Drive to Lebreton Flats as many hope, the convenience will still be there for many on the western end of the line.

(Sidebar 1: And I can't see the CTC not still being useful for all manner of major public events for the next couple of decades in any case. Provided the facility is properly cared for by whoever owns it. Yes, that's a piece of advice to the owners I want to see heeded.)

(Sidebar 2: As soon as I see a link to City Hall's page(s) on the matter, I'll set that up here.)

Back to those Unrealistic Expectations held by OC Transpo management.

They're hoping to be rid of paper tickets and bus passes forever, with all regular users forced into the Presto card system. Effective next year.

Not a welcome idea. I want those physical proofs of payment, partly as souvenirs in their own right, partly as tax paperwork documentation. Because tax credits for public transit usage. And because the Presto system requires using the internet to pay the monthly fare. I don't know that I'll be able to maintain my own access to the internet until I'm physically unable to use public transit anymore (hopefully due to extreme old age). More to the point, there are many other people across this city who share such financial uncertainties for any combination of reasons. And even if we can figure that out, internet access can be denied to entire populations due to accident or malice. We've seen an example of the kinds of unexpected infrastructure issues that can pop up today with the Rideau Street Sinkhole Incident.

Better to leave transit users the option of paying for hardcopy bus passes for the long term. Much better.

dewline: (canadian media)
Listening to CBC's Cross-Country Checkup at the moment. Subject today is the value and future of public libraries and archives, particular in the "digital age". Guest host is Peter Mansbridge, and you might want to listen to it either live or via podcast.

Some concerns of note and substance are being raised in the discussion today.
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
I long feared that what's happening to "Viterra" now was intended to be inevitable from the moment the management decided that they didn't want people referring to the company as the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool anymore.

No, not happy at all.
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
A friendly acquaintance of mine (and several others on my friendlist here at LJ) recently posted some interesting observations about the possible consequences of Obama's decision on the Keystone XL pipeline project.

I suspect that Alex is right on several points here, but I'd be interested in your perspective on his POV. Anyone?
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
Been noticing certain newspapers selling editions in Ottawa on a kick of doing front-page attacks on this project of the Ottawa Public Library in concert with the CBC:

http://biblioottawalibrary.ca/en/main/about/comm/human

Seeing as all the Right News Services seem to want us citizens trained to hate/fear this "Human Library" thing?

I'm sold on the need for it. And on the hope for its success.
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
It seems that we have a bit of an argument between Mayor Watson and the Member of Parliament for Ottawa-Nepean - who's also rather busy wearing his Minister of Foreign Affairs hat - over where Ottawa's spending priorities should lie. Details here:

http://ottawa.openfile.ca/blog/curator-blog/curated-news/2012/lrt-or-river-sewage-watsons-choice

As far as I'm concerned, Ottawa-the-city should not tolerate this being turned into a false "either-or" fight. We need both of these things done, and we needed them both done yesterday.

No?
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
We could do without this.

26 hectares of the South March Highlands in the west end of modern Ottawa is about to be clear-cut for home-builders, road-builders and so forth to do their thing. As was done to build most of the modern city from 1826 onwards. It's an old habit, and you'd think we've built outward instead of upwards enough for over 150 years.

But, apparently the addiction must still...still...be fed. Despite our efforts and desire to pull ourselves away from that table as a city.

Enough.
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
Something from Justin Beach today pointed me to this article on the Globe and Mail site.

The implications for internet access for the urban poor, the rural poor(or anyone else rural in residence for that matter)...well, I find the implications more than a little disturbing.

Point of fact, my reaction to Justin giving the heads-up via Facebook a few minutes ago was "What the Hell?!?"

If not for that funding program, I'm not sure that National Capital Freenet would've gotten off the ground here in Ottawa. That it did launch at all is a Good Thing.

(Could someone fact-check me on the NCF connection here? My suspicions do not necessarily constitute full-blown fact.)

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dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
On the DEWLine 2.0: Dwight Williams

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