RUNNING FOR MAYOR

Who would want to be the mayor of Renfrew?

Other than perennial candidate Cal Scott, what person would have the willingness to take on a thankless position at the head of a table of squabbling councillors and overly-confident and assertive administrative types?

Is it the base salary of $20,425?  Add committee and board assignment remuneration to this base salary, but where does that get you?

As recently as 2022, the mayor landed some $42,400, so one could maybe be forgiven for assuming that the mayor’s position took an almost twenty grand haircut in the two years since.

My point here is that it can’t be for the cash, at least not in 2025.  Maybe in 2022, when it was all rainbows and cherry blossoms, but not now.  At least I don’t think so.

Trying to get information on this sort of thing is like sitting in the dentist’s chair while they take multipole measurements of each tooth in your mouth while everyone in the room gets older.  Because of this, I’m going to take the $42,400 number as my working number, and to hell with what the internet says.

So, after all that, my question remains, who would want to be mayor of this place?  Is just over forty grand enough money for the self-abuse that surely follows everyone who wears the chain of office?  And if it’s not, how much salary would be enough?

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THE BILLIONAIRE’S CLUB

What happens to a man when he becomes a billionaire?

I’d include women in that question if they represented more than the 12% of existing billionaires, but it would be surprising to a lot of us to know that there are fully 337 female billionaires out there in the first place.  Surprising, not because they’re women, but rather because 337 is 12% of a much larger number of total billionaires.  And to me, that’s just flat-out troubling.

Female billionaires don’t appear to be the type who run around wedging their names into the world’s headlines.  They don’t appear to offer overly contentious commentary of local, national, and international stages.  I’m absolutely positive they have the financial heft to make their opinions known, and probably aren’t terribly shy in making their wishes come true.  They just seem to go about it in a way that makes them come up a rosier version of their male counterparts.

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AMERICA THE TERRIBLE

There’s an adage out there that says you can’t pick your neighbours but that you can sure as hell pick your friends.

It’s an adage that can now be applied to the relationship that currently exists between Canada and the United States.

Geography and history gave us the United States.  The Americans and their bizarre choice of a deranged president have given us Europe.

Big Mouth and his Acolytes, duly elected by our friends and family south of the border, have decided to undo maybe 145 years of collaborative history by singling us out for economic punishment and the threat of economic annexation as America’s so-called 51st state.

Good for them.  Whatever makes you feel relevant, if for some reason relevance has been something eluding you.  Maybe push around Greenland, Mexico, and Panama as well.  Completely estrange yourself from Europe and pull the rug out from under Ukraine while you’re at it.  Kiss Vladimir’s Russian ass and try not to ruin your makeup before having to do the same to China’s Xi.  Makes me wonder if you simply forgot about Japan and South Korea or if you just haven’t gotten around to pissing on them yet as well.

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MUSINGS AT OVC

When your local coffee shop becomes your office.

Not like anyone working here ever gave me permission to set up shop, it’s more like they’re just prepared to overlook the fact that I tend to occupy that same seat in front of the window most afternoons, pecking away at my keyboard, giving off the impression that I’m doing something really important.  For the record, I’m mostly not.  It’s all a smokescreen.

I’m just here for the window.

There was a time when that was sort of true.  Being a student of people and humanity, sitting in a window along the town’s main drag can bring a lot of those people and a lot of that humanity right to you and right by you as they pass along the sidewalk, busily on their way to wherever it is that they’re busily on their way to.

But, honestly, it’s become much more than that now.

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RENFREW NEEDS A COUNCIL HR LIAISON

When Renfrew Town Council went to a Committee of the Whole format, standing committees were made a thing of the past, and one of the casualties of that decision was the loss of a designated individual to handle the contract identification and enforcement duties usually undertaken by an HR person.

What this makes necessary is the appointment, or designation of such an individual, someone who can take on the role of Council HR Liaison.  As the name suggests, it’s a position requiring a liaison between council and administrative staff when it comes to the area of workers and the contractual conditions under which they toil for the town.

This designation is especially important as such a person would be involved in the grievance process.  Currently, there are three internal steps to any grievance procedure before the arbitration stage is reached.

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RENFREW’S IT DEBACLE

I guess there’s times in life where you just have to decide who it is you’d rather be sued by.

Imagine putting yourself in a position precarious enough that you can clearly see that, no matter what you do, somebody’s going to come at you with civil litigation.

Then, and simply for the point of making an argument, what if you were to put the corporation you work for in that precarious position?

At least to me, and I’m often alone in my thinking, none of anything above strikes me as good business, personal, corporate, or anything in between.

Getting sued, one way or another, is generally an indicator that something’s gone wrong, that somebody or group of somebodies messed up, that a grievance ensued, a grievance whose only remedy is cash.

The Town of Renfrew has signed an Information Technology (IT) service-provision contract with a company called OnServe, who by all accounts is a straight-up legitimate choice for the job had the award not been called into question, not by anything they did or might have done, but rather for the potentially and possibly fatally-flawed process that was utilized by town staff in awarding the contract in the first place.

That was a three-year contract worth approximately $85,000/year, which roughly extends out to $235,000 over the course of the deal.

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ORILLIA RECRUITS DOCTORS DIFFERENTLY

In June of 2024, I joined a growing number of Canadians who either don’t, didn’t, or no longer have a doctor.

This is a pretty jarring thing when you consider that this is the first time in my life that I’ve not had a general practitioner, or family doctor, and arguably it may be the most critical time in my life to have one.  But my doctor retired — as they’re allowed to do — and nobody jumped up to buy the business, if that’s what actually happened, or rather, didn’t happen.

I’ve been blessed with good health more or less, once you get past those three heart attacks and life-related stress, but all that considered, I feel like I’m in pretty good shape, so God does have some time to smile down upon me, which is fabulous, and I thank Him for that everyday.  Thanks to the Ottawa Heart Institute, I’m like a brand new guy in the heart department.  And thanks to the kindness and generosity of people generally, the stress department isn’t as over-worked as it once was.

There’s just one thing, though, and it’s kind of a biggy.  God, despite His splendour and magnificence, doesn’t write prescriptions.  As I think about potential flaws God may have, I feel this may be the only one.  But as I said, it’s kind of an important one.

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COUNCIL MEETING TONIGHT

If sparks fly tonight, I have to confess I have no idea where they may originate from.

Looking over the agenda of tonight’s Renfrew Town Council meeting, the content suggests a pro forma meeting where nothing terribly contentious seems to be on tap.

But one can never be certain, right?  Complacency is not something that I’d recommend, since it was only two weeks ago where I was fighting off sleep only to have a hockey fight break out.  Not that we approached anything you might see in the parliaments of places like Taiwan or Turkey or elsewhere where the gloves hit the ice and otherwise dignified parliamentarians clamber over furniture to get at their rivals, but still, you just never know if someone in the room has a motion hidden in their back pocket that they may brandish as a way to get some juice into the YouTube livestream broadcast.

My YouTube spotter informed me that there were over 300 people watching at one point last meeting, which is more people than simultaneously listen to Renfrew’s only radio station, something advertisers should take note of.

When we get to the point where we can sell ads on a municipal YouTube livestream, then we’ve really accomplished something of substance.  Additional scrutiny of those viewing metrics show that additional people watched the video after-the-fact, which is really something, and hopefully not an indictment of what’s on television on a Tuesday night.

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THE LIGHTS AT MA-TE-WAY

It was back in October 2024 when Councillor Andrew Dick announced at Council that the ballparks at Ma-Te-Way were going to be lit in the summer of 2025 and “It doesn’t matter what it costs.”

It’s February 2025 and baseball season is just a little over three months away, so we seem to be approaching a time of critical decision-making when it comes to this issue.

There is one thing that’s generally regarded as being certain and where agreement is unanimous.  The lights at Ma-Te-Way are a mess, and that mess is going to require some cash to fix.  And if the fix is to include the Dog Park and a parking lot, then the cash required will be more than to just light the three fields.

Councillor Dick is a ballplayer, so he’s close to the issue.  That’s not a problem in any way, as these ballparks are pretty heavily-used, and they do bring money into the community in terms of user fees and peripheral spending from ball teams on game day or on tournament weekends.  So, while calling the ball fields economic engines might be a stretch to a degree, any time a ball team comes to town or stays in town, that peripheral spending does have an impact on restaurants, convenience stores, motels, pizza shops, and yes, beer and liquor stores, although that last area can now be folded into grocery and corner stores as well.

The situation regarding lighting at Ma-Te-Way involves not a crumbling infrastructure, but rather a crumbled infrastructure.  In other words, the best-before date was, to put it bluntly, a long time ago, and perhaps mitigated by decisions that could have been made by past councils, but that’s a moot point in that they weren’t made, and so here we are, in the dark.

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THE CARBON TAX IS DEAD

Well, it’s toast, or about as toast as we’re gonna get without having the actual toast in hand.

Ding-dong, the witch is dead.

The witch I speak of is the Carbon Tax, perhaps the most hated thing to waft through the Canadian consciousness since, well, the Carbon Tax.  Or maybe the GST, but that’s still with us thirty-five years after it was going to be scrapped, which is what we do here in Canada when we don’t like something, we scrap it.

Scrap gives the impression of something cast away in disgust, almost as if garbage, almost as if we’re absolutely disgusted with it.  We can’t just get rid of it, or replace it, or make it better somehow.  In Canada, we scrap things.

Pierre Poilievre, more than anyone, can take credit for this, so give credit where credit is due.  At least when he sets out to scrap something, as in a tax on carbon, the only thing that suffers damage is the environment.  Doug Ford’s anti-carbon levy campaign has cost Ontarians the same environmental price, but also millions of dollars in losses to go along with it.

But it’s not just Conservatives now, it’s Liberals too.  The two front-runners for the Liberal leadership. Chrystia Freeland and Mark Carney have both indicated that they will discontinue to Carbon Tax is they’re successful at replacing Justin Trudeau.

So I guess that’s that.

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