Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Regina Extension cord bylaw.

I was upset about getting a ticket for a bylaw infraction, and wrote a letter about it to the Leader Post here in Regina Saskatchewan. My letter went like this;
BEWARE! Winter parking on the street means no power for you!

Those of us forced to park on the street overnight in winter are going to need stout vehicles, because in Regina it's actually a ticket-able offense to run an extension cord across a sidewalk to plug your car into! What an absurd bylaw to have, let alone to enforce, in a Saskatchewan winter!

The explanation I received from the Bylaw division was that “it is a trip hazard, and the city would be liable for it”. Now I understand that the city wants to protect itself from liability, but with reasonable measures (such as a bright yellow extension cord, and a contentiously cleaned sidewalk, there should be no reason that even an infirm individual will not recognize and be able to avoid this sometimes very necessary and insignificant “hazard”.

That's not the worst of it unfortunately; my first issue is how the officer (Badge No: C504) decided that rather than come to the house and inform us we were in violation of a city ordinance, and give us the opportunity to comply, he UNPLUGGED the vehicle and THEN wrote the ticket! (Obviously we were home, which of course we would have complied to!) My next issue is that this Officer failed to give a ticket for the EXACT same infraction, to the house right next door to us (not to mention any number of other offences occurring on the street, at the very moment he was issuing my ticket!)

Now of course we all feel like a victim when we get a ticket we don't want (and in this case weren't even aware that it was an infraction), but it's even worse when you are singled out among many of the same infractions occurring in the exact same single block street. If the officer was there to strictly enforce the bylaw (rather than give the person a chance to comply with it), then why was I the only one ticketed for that on my block?

My question is simple; What do you do in winter in Regina to keep your car running, if you have to park on the street?

It's really hard to “heart” Regina with bylaws like this enforced without the application of common sense and common courtesy.


I was also interviewed by CBC, Global, and CTV about this issue, and in an online poll conducted on the CBC article it seems that 85% of the voters agree that this should either not be a law, or the officer should have used judgement on whether or not it was dangerous.

I have started an online petition to start change, located at; PETITION.

I would love to hear ideas on how we can keep pedestrians safe, and at the same time accommodate the necessity of Saskatchewan residents to plug their vehicles in when they must park on the street.

Bob

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Yes they are serious too!! And that's what's so scary!

Obviously I don't post a lot on here, because I honestly (and literally) find "career politics" like we have in Canada more often than not petty, stupid and depressingly upsetting no matter which party Governs. I do also find that the majority of idiocy can be found in the left, which include Libs, NDP and most definitely the Bloc.

I'm going to post the opening Question from Michael Ignatieff to the Prime Minister in Question period from October 20th 2010.

"Mr. Speaker, on Monday at Our Lady of Lourdes high school in Guelph, a young student named Diane asked me a question, “We are caring for my grandmother at home. If elected, what would you do to help people who are caring for the sick and elderly at home?” I replied to Diane, “Our answer is the family care plan”. The Conservatives' answer is, “Use your vacation time”.

How can the Prime Minister justify tax breaks for profitable corporations instead of helping families like Diane's?"
(transcript here; under "Government priorities".)

My initial thought was "Huh????? You really don't see the need to help keep companies profitable in a recession so that Diane's parents still may have a job which helps them be able to take care of their Grandmother?" (And yes it's a long sentence, but I just don't think with punctuation.)

So the question here is simple, is it easier to tax, or to "un-tax"? Or an even more relevant question would be, Do we want jobs to continue, or are we okay forcing business closures by raising taxes in "tough economic times"?

I like Ignatieff's ideas for monetary support for families caring for sick and disabled, however I also see it as reckless taxation and spending at a time where creating and keeping jobs alive is important for everyone. (Which I believe has been a key issue for the Liberals against the Conservatives in past attacks as well. So this begs the question "what's changed the liberals minds?", has the Government fiscal responsibility turned the tides on the 21st century's great depression enough to make the Liberals feel their pockets are once again full enough to make pricey promises to the public?)

Bob