Sep
21
2008
0

Green Train

The Green Party of Canada leader Elizabeth May is choo-chooing across Canada with their Green Train.

No doubt, the Greens learned their lesson from David Suzuki who was criticized when he made a similar tour across Canada in a diesel bus last year. Of course those same conservative-extremist pundits will still attack those concerned about pollution for doing anything else than living in trees, and they’ll rightly point out that a train creates just the same amount of pollution a bus creates. But the Greens are smart to point out it uses less than a plane uses, subtlety hinting at the Liberal Party’s gaffe last month.

Using the train is quite brilliant. Not only is it cheaper than flying, it’s symbolic and historically relevant. Journalists and photographers on board not only have unfettered access to May (you can’t wander freely on a plane) but the trip lends May great visuals and backdrops as the train makes it way across Canada’s beautiful vistas and stopping in small towns to greet the people whom most politicians fly over.

Furthermore the Greens are using the train tour to highlight their call for $1 billion upgrades to Canada’s rail system which ties into their urban transportation strategy.

The first federal politician to use the whistle-stop train tour as a campaign strategy was former prime minister Wilfrid Laurier in the 1900 election. Since then Diefenbaker and Trudeau used this strategy much to their favour.

May arrives in Winnipeg on Tuesday and should arrive in her Central Nova riding on Friday. Polls have the Greens sitting at 10%, more than twice their draw last election.

Written by Alex Reid involving: |

Sep
20
2008
0

Park-ing Day

Yesterday was Park(ing) Day in Winnipeg, as Pedro reports.

National Park(ing) Day is a day to celebrate parks in the urban environment and promote the demand for more parks and greenspace, transforming public parking spaces into temporary public parks.

National Park(ing) Day 2008 is a concept created by San Francisco art collective Rebar in 2005 to re-imagine the potential of the metered parking space. In 2006, in collaboration with TPL, REBAR founded “PARK(ing) Day”: a global exploration of the creative potential of streets.

Awesome idea, and no surprise San Francisco was the city of origin!

Written by Alex Reid involving: |

Sep
16
2008
0

Dog DNA database dares to dash dog doodoo

The BBC reports that a city in Israel (population 180,000) is setting up a DNA database to match dog poop left in their streets to their owners in order to fine them. In the UK, some towns have resorted to using surveillance cameras and undercover patrols to identify offenders in particular trouble spots.

Tika Bar-On, the city’s chief veterinarian who came up with the idea for the DNA experiment, told Reuters the DNA database could also help veterinarians research genetic diseases in dogs, investigate canine pedigree and identify stray animals, replacing the need for electronic chip identification.

“The sky is the limit on how far we can take this,” she said.

Written by Alex Reid involving: |

Sep
14
2008
0

Wordle

Tag clouds are fun, but Wordle has a nice Java applet that slightly animates the tagging with options of colour and font schemes. I did one of several sites, including mine. Apparently I need to ease up on some subjects. ;)

Written by Alex Reid involving: |

Sep
09
2008
0

The City’s new website

One of my long standing problems the City of Winnipeg has been it’s inability to communicate with city residents via its most valuable (and lowest priced) property they own: their web site.

I’m proud to work with the guy who helped redesign and retool the new City of Winnipeg web site. The site looks clean and the usability is simply. I’m so happy I’ve added the web site to my list of links on my site. Bravo!

Written by Alex Reid involving: |

Alex Reid is a Canadian who likes a lot of things. Welcome to my world.