All posts by James W. Breckenridge

Royal Pian in the Neck.

As I start writing this I am sitting in a chair in the Emergency room at the new Abbotsford Regional Hospital.

A cyst in my neck has developed an infection becoming painfully swollen, filled and bulging with pus and other ichors. The pain and the desire to deal with the infection before it spread throughout my body sent me off to my doctor.

Who said it was a matter that needed to be dealt with at the hospital so I headed off to Emergency.

The hour and a half spent in the waiting room was not unexpected and I relaxed and wiled away the time watching several cooking shows on the food network which was playing on one of the several TVs situated around the much more spacious waiting room.

My name was called and I followed the nurse into the emergency room where I entered one of the curtained cubicles and sat down to await the doctor, who arrived shortly.

Taking a look at my neck he expressed his displeasure and upset with the fact that my neck had not been opened and the cyst removed at my doctor’s office rather than sending me to Emergency.

However when this same cyst had developed an infection last year, the doctor at the walk-in clinic only lanced the infection to allow the pus and assorted ichors to drain telling me , as I was handed a prescription for antibiotics, that I needed to go to the hospital to have the cyst itself removed.

Now I really do not care who was correct about where the cyst should have been removed.

What I do care about is the ER doctor expressing his displeasure with me being directed to Emergency, then stalking off to deal with, as he put it, “…real sick people” and leaving me sitting around for hours wondering when he would get around to treating my neck seemingly fallen to the bottom of his list because of his displeasure with my doctor sending me to Emergency.

It was unfair and unprofessional for the ER doctor to allow his pique with my doctor sending me to Emergency to affect his interactions with and treatment of me.

Running out to plug more money to feed the voracious appetite of the parking meter machine I did find myself wondering if part of the reason it takes so long in the ER is because it costs $2 an hour to park with no maximum set as to the amount that can be extorted. I wonder how much faster people would be in and out of ER if a maximum parking charge of 2 hours was set for ER patients?

When the ER doctor deigned to return to me, again raising the subject of my doctor’s action, I was very careful to be noncommittal to avoid spending more hours sitting in the ER. He opened up my neck, cleaning out pus, ichors, and digging out the cyst then sending me off saying I probably did not need antibiotics and that I could have the packing removed in three days or even remove it myself.

Later that night as I was washing the blood that leaked out of the wound and into the collar of my shirt, sincerely regretting the lack of pain medication as the freezing wore off and contemplating the use of alcohol as a pain killer and/or sleep aid, I decided to pay an official office visit to a nurse of gentle hands and compassion the next day. Who did indeed carefully and gently change the bandage for me

When she heard I had not been given a prescription for antibiotics she handed me some extra bandages instructing me to change the bandage every day and pay careful attention to the discharge and if it looked like an infection was setting in to see a doctor for antibiotic treatment.

I was told that I should seek out someone to remove the packing in the wound, rather than remove it myself as suggested by the ER doctor. Preferable someone with access to wound packing materials in case it needed to be repacked. That I should have the packing removed sooner rather than later to avoid any complications or problems.

Fortunately she also informed me as to what over-the-counter pain medication I should seek out to provide relief from the pain.

It was much more pleasant, helpful and informative to deal with a medical practitioner behaving in a considerate and professional manner.

Who cares – close enough!

I usually park in the Yale high school lot when I go to ARC to swim my lengths since it is a shorter walk to the “(old) pool front desk” – unless the weather is sufficiently bad as to encourage me to use the new underground parking space.

The last time I used the underground parking rain was coming down in a deluge and as I walked down the ramp to the ice and pool area I had to walk around the water dribbling down the ramp and the bucket set out to catch water leaking through the brand new roof.

Monday’s strong winds encouraged me to take advantage of the shelter from the wind the underground parking offered my poor old car. Finished swimming my lengths I rode the elevator down to the parking level and as I stepped out of the elevator I found myself once again stepping around a wet spot on the floor, in this case a growing puddle.

I found myself looking at the ceiling where the water was dripping from and wondering exactly where the water was coming from. I had just walked across the floor upstairs, directly above the spot were the water was dripping down from the ceiling to the floor, and it was dry. The water was dripping from (through? out of?) the bare, poured concrete ceiling.

Water dripping from (through? out of?) a poured concrete ceiling in a spot well inside the confines of the building and under a spot where the floor upstairs above was dry sent me back up the elevator to report the leak and growing puddle to staff at the “new front desk”.

Since they did not come down to check the matter out in the 5 -10 minutes I spent trying to get a decent picture using my cell phone (I need a newer, better camera cell phone) I cannot say what staff’s reaction to the leak was.

The two gentlemen who came down the elevator and stopped to look at the ceiling and floor also wondered just where the water was coming from (through? out of?).

They also shared my less than impressed opinion on the workmanship standards this leak evidenced; especially since the dripped water was running along the cracks, thus highlighting the cracks/cracking, in the brand new poured concrete floor.

I am currently contemplating avoiding the underground parking and confining my activities at ARC to the time-tested solid “old ARC”.

As well as wondering “We paid how much for this?” and “Whatever happened to quality control and pride of workmanship?”

Caveat emptor I suppose.

A warm Candle Thanks.

A quick note of THANKS to the kind people who collected then delivered candles to me over the past few days.

They were very much appreciated by the homeless seeking candles on a blustery Monday. This weather driven run on candles seriously reduced the level of candles on hand and has me seeking additionally supplies (hint, hint).

For those who are weathering out artic temperatures in their camps the candles can well be life savers.

Thank You all.

Bailout the Auto Industry? Bad Idea.

Let’s get real here.

To listen to the proponents of a bailout you would think that if a bailout is not forthcoming the North American headquartered auto industry with all its assets and jobs will, *poof*, disappear. Trust me, it won’t.

What will happen is that the North American headquartered auto industry will file for court protection via bankruptcy. The North American headquartered auto industry will then have to come up with a viable reorganization plan and get the plan approved by the court. This course of action would result in a reasonable chance that the North American headquartered auto industry would come out of the process in a viable state.

The first point that seems to be getting lost here is the fact that as it is now constituted the North American headquartered auto industry is not viable and is burning through $billions$ of dollars as it haemorrhages loses. A bailout will only allow the North American headquartered auto industry to continue to waste money, this time at taxpayer’s expense.

The North American headquartered auto industry needs to undergo a massive makeover in order to be a viable industry and bankruptcy is the best process to ensure this occurs. Remember that bankruptcy protection of business was designed to facilitate this reorganization, re-emergence process.

The second point to remember is that we are speaking only of the North American headquartered auto industry, the so-called big-three, here. There is an entire North American auto industry that is not headquartered in North America and while it is suffering from the economic downturn it is healthy and will grow, creating jobs, to cover and satisfy any market demand left unmet by the loss of a North American headquartered auto company.

The third point I would make is that the situation the North American headquartered auto industry finds itself in is the direct result of management, shareholder and employee decisions made over the past decades.
These decisions focused not on neither the long-term health and viability of the companies, or even the short-term health and viability of the companies, but entirely upon the greed based decision framework of maximizing the money made by management, workers and shareholders.

Playing these types of paper financial games will always result in, at some point, either the death of the entity or entities playing such games or in the need to reorganize in accordance with the real economic and business position of the company or companies.

The fourth point I want to make, or perhaps share, is that I have no sympathy for shareholders who have not only permitted management to mismanage the companies but actively encouraged them through executive reward and remuneration systems based on meeting quarterly (extremely short term) targets and goals as opposed to remuneration tied to the long term success, viability and health of the corporation. When all decisions are made on short term artificial targets and goals, these decisions are made at the expense of the long-term viability and survival of the corporation and nobody should be surprised that at some point this results in a non-viable corporation.

Points three and four reflect and underscore the reality that unless corporations, in this case the North American headquartered auto industry, refocus or are forced to refocus to consider the long-term effects of the decisions being made they will simply cycle through short-term paper success, financial trouble/disaster, bankruptcy and emergence from bankruptcy. There were sound reasons that the management and financial courses at the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Commerce stressed the need for basing decisions not just on the short term but on the long term effects on the survival and prospering of the company.

Which brings me to the final and perhaps most important point I want to make – the situation where greed results in decisions that provide (excessive) rewards for what prove in the longer run to be self-destructive decisions with costly consequences to all is not confined or unique to the North American headquartered auto industry.

The meltdown of the banking system in the US is/was clearly a result of greed running rampant. The only thing that saved Canadian banks from a similar fate was far tighter banking regulations and the luck that without a majority government Stephen Harper was not able to follow the US deregulation craze into disaster.

We either need to stop basing decisions on Greed or (more likely) provide regulation and remuneration systems that prevent short term abuse in pursuit of greed and reward/mandate long-term decisions based on survival, viability and health.

Only in Ottawa!

Start with the incredible level of hypocrisy in Stephen Harper and his Conservatives criticizing the Liberals for using the Bloc Quebecois to bring down the Conservative’s minority government when Harper used the Bloc to bring down Paul Martin’s minority government.

Then there is the karma/wheel of fate/justice aspects involved with the Liberals bringing down the Conservatives in the same manner as Harper and his Conservatives brought down the Liberals only a few years ago.

Not to mention the delicious irony of Harper and his Conservatives being done to as they did to the Liberals, being done to as they did unto others.

Listening to the government bleat about mandate leaves one pondering if this is “smoking gun” proof that Harper and his Conservatives just do not get what Canadians want or were saying to them in the last election or if this is just massive cynicism/hypocrisy as they desperately try to cling to power.

The main messages that Canadians sent to Mr. Harper and his Conservatives in the last election, that Canadians did not feel Mr. Harper was too be trusted with a majority and that they were happy with or even preferred a Conservative minority government that needed to collaborate with the other political parties, seems to have been entirely lost on Harper and his Conservatives.

Let us remember that the current chaotic disarray in Ottawa is the direct result of Stephen Harper’s school yard bully behaviour and tactics in parliament in the weeks prior to this discombobulation; that Mr. Harper and his Conservatives are reaping as they sowed.

Clearly Canadian voters were correct in their judgment that Mr. Harper was not to be trusted with a majority government. It is apparent Mr. Harper is so blinded by his ideology and world view that he just does not “get Canadians” or the messages Canadians were sending in the election results.

Given that 62.4% of Canadians voted for someone other than the Conservatives I do not think one can deny that a coalition of the other parties has a legitimate right to have an opportunity to form a cooperative minority government, since Canadians voted for a cooperative minority government, albeit with the Conservatives as part of the government.

In choosing to ignore Canadians expressed wishes for a cooperative minority government, the Conservative party as currently constituted forfeited their right to take the lead in forming this minority government.

To be perfectly honest, given the current Conservative governments demonstrated lack of understanding of the social issues and depth of poverty and economic need in Canada it most likely that the most vulnerable people and families in Canada would fare much better in these tough economic times with a minority government Liberal/NDP alliance.

Given the economic downturn and the disproportionate effects our economic woes will have in the real world on the poorest and most vulnerable Canadians it is just as important that a Conservative leader have clearly demonstrated that they understand this reality and are not blinded by ideology.

The reality of the current situation in Canada is that we need flexibility not ideology, open not closed or made up minds, good ideas based on understanding reality not upon “this is what I believe the situation is and that is what I will decide based upon – not reality”. At the same time we need to behave in a fiscally responsible manner.

Any alternative solution that would (as it should) include the Conservative party must result in enough confidence about the future behaviour of the Conservative party in forming or participating in the cooperative minority government mandated by Canadians in the last federal election will require the exit of Mr. Harper and the choice of a Conservative leader who Canadians and the other parties in parliament can trust to actually form a cooperative minority government.

Given Mr. Harper’s behaviour in hoarding power in his own hands together with his dictatorial and school yard bully ways I doubt Mr. Harper or his Conservatives have either the personal integrity or statesmanship to put the best interests of Canada ahead of their own personal interests despite their rhetoric about Canadians wants or best interests.

Should I be proven wrong and a new Conservative leader comes to the table to put Canadian’s and Canada’s interests first, the same applies to the Liberal and NDP leaders – put Canadian and Canada’s best interest first or get out of the way for someone who will.

What Canada needs right now is Leadership, not politics and politicians.