Saturday, November 7, 2020

City parking court lost my respect

I went to court again, this time as a defendant. A few months ago, I went to a local pre-school's annual open door with student displays, parent barbecues, games and fun for the whole family. This preschool is located in an upmarket neighborhood with clearly posted parking limits and restrictions for blocks. I parked about four blocks away and went to the fair, and when I returned to my car two hours later within the three-hour limit was most surprised to find a ticket on the windshield. Not for parking too long, but for parking within 8 feet of a driveway. This $125 fine was entirely bogus so I decided to contest it.

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Dual-enrolment is a great idea

I had breakfast with a former colleague this morning. I say breakfast, but it would have been more accurately described as lunch. She was telling me about the dual-enrolment program at her local school and I confessed to being a fan although my dual-enrolment experience was different. It was for elementary students.

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

NPR is not as objective as they claim

I am listening today to the election results, commentary and explanations on my local NPR station. To be fair, they are not NPR although they brand themselves as such. They are an entity provided by the local state university and they purchase programming from NPR amongst other public radio providers. Both the local station and the NPR feed are claiming seemingly every five minutes or so that they do not offer opinions, they bring the facts, they are objective. None of this is true.

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

I will never support a Council on Aging

 Some years ago I had an elderly neighbor who had no family apart from a disinherited son and was in some financila distress. He had no income no income but he owned his home, so I offered to buy the home at then market rates, with him to stay there until he died or had to go into care with free rent paying only taxes and insurance. There was also something about maintenance, although I do not remember the details. His attorney and my attorney were happy with the concept, the law and the contract. Then his son found out.

Sunday, November 1, 2020

Wealthy private schools

Several articles in the last month or two have mentioned "wealthy" private schools, including eye-catching tables and charts. Possibly this is intended to invoke "shock horror" or "omigod, how they can be so wealthy and still charge fees (or such high fees". Other than coverage of US college endowments, in none of these pieces have I seen a breakdown of what comprises this wealth, and even in the case of the endowments, a simple number without explanation or context probably provides a false picture.