Hot weather slows us down

We took a family train ride to Durham today, then rode our bikes around the city for two hours. It was fun but, boy, were we all soaked with sweat by the time we had lunch. After our ride we drove over to Ridge Road Pool but didn’t even get out of the car before the thunder cleared the pool. Then we didn’t even get cooled off by the thunderstorm because it never got near us. Thanks for nothing, storm!

I was planning to get in another ride Sunday morning with my neighbor and brother but the heat index Sunday will be 102 degrees. No thanks! I think I’ll pace myself during outdoor time tomorrow.

During breakfast I found my mind wandering in an effort to escape the heat. I daydreamed of what it must be like in the San Juan Islands right now. Then I made the mistake of checking the forecast.

High of 67 degrees today. Arrghh! I so wish we could afford to jet up there again for another week of cool weather and gorgeous scenery. It was almost cruel to think about.

Amtrak’s perplexing fares

I’m taking the train up to Virginia over the Fourth of July weekend to meet Kelly and the kids. Booking my travel on Amtrak provided an interesting choice in fares.

I’ve got two choices for travel: one leaves Raleigh at 10:56 AM and arrives at Fredericksburg at 3:39 PM. The other choice leaves Raleigh at 8:54 AM and arrives at Fredericksburg at 3:39 PM, but provides a convenient extra two hours to wander around the Richmond train station. So with an extra four hours of travel time you’d think they’d offer a cheaper fare, right? So what does Amtrak charge? An extra fifteen bucks!

I’m still not sure what makes doubling the travel time worth extra money. Bizarre. Maybe this is just a sign of how far rail travel in America has yet to go.

Bonus link: Check out RailServe for promotional codes and good tips about traveling by train.

Wade and Oberlin smells like cat urine

Ok, I know I’m not imagining it. For the past few days when I’ve driven past the intersection of Wade Avenue and Oberlin Road, I’ve been confronted by the smell of … cat urine!? As a long-time cat owner it’s a smell I’m all too familiar with. The first few times I drove by I chalked it up to imagination but this morning I decided it must really be what I smell.

The Care First Animal Hospital at that intersection is the vet where I took my cat for years. The sewer line from the vet must be full of pet urine. Could that be what I’m smelling?

Hoyle’s hijacking H1840 is worse than reported

Sen. David Hoyle (D-Gaston)

I have a correction regarding H1840. Sen. Hoyle did not gut H1840 of it’s extension of the e-NC sunset provision. However, Hoyle did tack on his moratorium language to the existing e-NC language. This is even worse than if Hoyle had gutted H1840, because the bill appears innocuous when it really isn’t.

My confusion resulted from Hoyle’s last-minute addition of the bill to the Senate agenda. It seems there is no such thing as sunshine in the state Senate.

Meeker’s East CAC appearance in the news

The appearance of Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker at our Monday evening East CAC meeting has generated news, with Meeker calling for the school board’s reassignment policy to be scrutinized by legal experts. I could tell when he took that question that he was fired up about the issue. He should be: over 40% of student families are Raleigh residents.

I dashed off this letter to the editor this morning:

Thank goodness Mayor Meeker is fighting this RECKLESS WASTE of TAXPAYER DOLLARS by our irresponsible school board majority on their pet project social experiment. There are serious and lasting repercussions to the board’s ill-conceived changes, not the least of which is to your wallet and mine!

As mayor of over 40% of the students in the Wake County School System, Meeker is rightfully concerned about the abject destruction taking place at the hands of the current school board.

I applaud Meeker’s efforts!!

Hopefully the board will consider the magnitude of their reckless changes. But I doubt it.

Update 29 June: The N&O ran my letter today.

Gen. McChrystal’s firing

Obama fired Army General Stan McChrystal yesterday over comments that appeared in Rolling Stone Magazine.

Many are applauding the move, and it seemed sound to me at first. However, after reviewing the comments that were said I am less convinced that what McChrystal said was meant to be disrespectful. It seems to me that the general and aides were expressing frustration with the media’s harping on disagreements with Vice President Biden, not with Biden himself.

I am a firm believer in civilian control of the military, and I am fully aware that military leaders often play whomever is President like a fiddle – boxing him or her into decisions that the President doesn’t want to make. That might be reason to dismiss the general, but expressing dissent should not be.

I think the wisest leaders are ones who solicit all opinions and weigh each of them. I hear Obama takes this approach in his meetings. Dissent should be welcome, as long as the President’s orders continue to be faithfully executed. Obama stated that McChrystal faithfully carried out his orders.

One thing I couldn’t stand in when I was in the military was the “dead weight” who advanced simply because they hung around long enough. No opinion of their own, they just mindlessly follow orders. Good soldiers, sailors, and employees work to keep their bosses from making bad decisions. Sometimes they lose that fight, but I see it as vital that they at least try. I wouldn’t want my staff stacked with yes-men. That’s a path to sure failure.

From what I’ve read, McChrystal appears to have unique insight into the Afghan government. I hope whatever success he carved out of that dusty land did not fall victim to a stupid battle of egos. Obama might look weaker in caving in to the press.

Do you know your CAC? | WakeMed Voices

WakeMed visited Monday’s East CAC meeting and came away impressed. WakeMed is Wake County’s largest private employer and is located in East Raleigh.

Yesterday evening, I had the distinct pleasure of attending the East Community Advisory Council (CAC) meeting at Lions Park Community Center off Dennis Drive in Raleigh. At WakeMed, we are more committed than ever to being involved with the communities we serve and want to understand community issues from citizens’ perspectives so we can be even better neighbors. This commitment led me to the East CAC meeting to represent our WakeMed Raleigh Campus, which is located in the district.

One thing that Ms. Monackey didn’t mention is that Raleigh’s CACs are chaired and organized solely by community volunteers.

via Do you know your CAC? | WakeMed Voices.

Hoyle guts H1840, puts his moratorium in

Sen. David Hoyle (D-Gaston)

Sen. David Hoyle, frustrated that S1209, his municipal broadband moratorium bill, is going nowhere, has gutted H1840, an e-NC sunset bill championed by Rep. Bill Faison, and inserted Hoyle’s moratorium bill in an effort to spite Rep. Faison.

Stay classy, Hoyle!

Muni broadband moratorium put in another bill

For those watching the municipal broadband moratorium bill you have another bill to keep track of.

The Senate Rules Committee attached the broadband study and moratorium as constructed in S 1209 and dumped it into H 1840, which has to do with extending E-NC authority.

I asked Sen. David Hoyle, chairman of the Rules Committee, why he was sending over a bill that has already passed the Senate.

“I’m sending it over with something the House likes,” Hoyle said. “I can’t get a committee hearing on the broadband.”

Update 25 June: Hoyle didn’t actually gut H1840. What he actually did was much worse.

via Muni broadband moratorium put in another bill.

Free iPad scam

A neighbor of mine unwittingly sent the following email to a neighborhood email list:

I just became an iPad apps tester, and thought you might like to try it out. Here’s an invitation to become a tester too. They say you can keep the iPad when testing is finished. Grab it!

——————————————————————

unsuspecting.user@gmail.com has invited you to candidate as an Apple iPAD software tester.

To accept this invite and sign-up as a tester, click on
http://www.apps-Research.com/

If you haven’t already heard about test Apple iPAD Apps, we are a program that helps Apple iPAD applications developers make better Apps, by finding testers.

– We are looking for 5000 Apple iPAD apps testers
– No fees, costs nothing to you
– Test iPad apps for 2 months
– Send weekly reports, suggestions
– You may keep the iPad at program completion
Continue reading

N&O covers broadband fight

The N&O covered the municipal broadband fight today. While it does quote opponents of the moratorium like Rep. Bill Faison, it doesn’t challenge the statements of Sen. “Fiber will be obsolete” Hoyle, who obviously has little or no idea what he’s talking about. Hoyle has been comparing the debt of municipal broadband projects (cost: $28 million) to the debt used to build the Shearon Harris nuclear reactor (cost: $4 billion), a laughable comparison on its face. The numbers simply don’t compare.

The article also failed to mention that the state’s Local Government Commission has vetted all of these projects and declared that them to be on sound financial footing. And that until now Wilson hadn’t raised its pole attachment fee in over 30 years.

In spite of these flaws, the comments to the story’s web edition are running overwhelmingly in favor of municipal broadband projects. Clearly there is reason for caution before blocking them with a moratorium.