Yikes. Expect someone to propose this in some American community soon.
It’s the new front in the nanny state: Microchips placed in garbage bins to monitor how much people throw away.
A pro-privacy group warns in a new report that more than 2.6 million of the chips have been surreptitiously installed in what is seen as a first step toward charging those who toss too much.
Proponents say it’s a bid to push recycling. Opponents say it stinks.
“They should mind their own business,” said Terry Williams, an unemployed Londoner who thinks the government is meddling. “I believe they have gone too far. It’s not like we are throwing away anything that is illegal.”
The advocacy group Big Brother Watch found through a series of Freedom of Information requests that many local governments, called councils in Britain, are installing the microchips in trash cans distributed to households, but in most cases have not yet activated them — in part because officials know the move would be unpopular.
“They are waiting for the political climate to change before they start using them,” said campaign director Dylan Sharpe, who predicted that families that produce large amounts of garbage would be fined.
Kudos to Starbucks. I may have to start drinking coffee.
Starbucks has been forced into confirming it’s OK to carry guns in some of their coffee houses, after campaigners tested its policy.
Anti-gun protesters want the coffee chain to declare its coffee houses “gun- free zones”.
But in some states, where it is legal to carry a weapon, Starbucks says enforcing a ban would mean turning away law-abiding citizens.
The White House is right here.
The Obama administration has said it will seek to block a controversial bill describing as genocide the World War I killing of Armenians by Turks.
A congressional panel on Thursday approved the resolution, paving the way for a possible vote by the House.
But US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the administration would “work very hard” to prevent this.
Turkey voiced strong protests after the vote and recalled its ambassador from Washington for consultations.
The truth is that it was genocide by any reasonable definition of the word. History recognizes it as such. But passing a resolution to this effect won’t change the history and serves to tick off a very critical ally. It would be better for the Congress to stay out of it and let the history books worry about what we call the Armenian genocide.
The entire senior class at Chicago’s only public all-male, all-African-American high school has been accepted to four-year colleges. At last count, the 107 seniors had earned spots at 72 schools across the nation.
Mayor Richard Daley and Chicago Public Schools chief Ron Huberman surprised students at an all-school assembly at Urban Prep Academy for Young Men in Englewood this morning to congratulate them. It’s the first graduating class at Urban Prep since it opened its doors in 2006.
Good.
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Chancellor Carlos Santiago said Friday that the university will discipline students who tried to enter the building that houses his office a day earlier, saying the university will not tolerate assemblies that become violent.
Santiago said in a statement that the school will pursue charges against the 13 students and two other protesters who were arrested Thursday on suspicion of unlawful assembly, disorderly conduct and throwing hard objects.
UWM Police officers said the protesters punched them while trying to rush Chapman Hall during the rally against the rising cost of college and against budget cuts for university departments. Officers discharged pepper spray into the air to get students to back away from officers who had been pushed into the doors of the building, school officials said.
“For these individuals who demonstrated no respect for our campus community, we will pursue legal action and, for the students, we will review whether any university rules were violated that require additional action,” Santiago said.
Discipline by the university could range from a verbal reprimand to expulsion.
If they are expelled, then they won’t have to worry about the cost of education.
So after destroying thousands of jobs and ruining lives, Government Motors says “OOPS! Do over!”
General Motors Co. will reinstate more than half the dealerships it targeted to drop from its network.
GM executives said Friday that about 600 dealerships out of the 1,100 seeking to stay with GM will receive letters giving them the option to remain with the automaker.
The Detroit automaker last year told 2,000 dealerships it would revoke their franchise agreements in October 2010 as part of its restructuring. The company has said it needs to shrink the number of showrooms to keep the remaining ones healthy.
The dealerships, who say they have been treated unfairly, have been appealing the decision.
You know… Doyle has been governor for seven years. He didn’t show any interest at all in reforming MPS until Obama dangled some money in front of him. The MPS board also hasn’t shown any interest in reforming MPS. Nor the legislature… not the mayor… methinks that all of their current carping is more about them not getting to spend a bunch of federal dollars than it is about helping the kids of Milwaukee.
Wisconsin’s failure to make it past the first cut in the national competition for $4.35 billion to improve schools launched a volley of finger-pointing Thursday between the governor, legislators and interest groups.
Gov. Jim Doyle criticized the state Legislature for not acting on reform measures the governor wanted in the state’s application for the federal Race to the Top grant competition, namely allowing mayoral control of Milwaukee Public Schools and giving the state Department of Public Instruction enhanced powers to intervene in struggling schools.
He also criticized the MPS board for inaction on critical issues, including its inability to come up with its own reform agenda for drastically improving educational outcomes for children.
“Today’s announcement should be a wake-up call to many,” Doyle said Thursday. “U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has made it clear: The federal government will provide significant resources to states that are serious about reform. Milwaukee needs clear, consistent, accountable leadership focused on reform.”
It’s a good question.
The citizen group tasked with providing the West Bend School District advice on facility planning questioned Thursday whether the portion of the Badger Middle School scheduled for demolition could be salvaged to alleviate building space needs.
Committee members are exploring the possibility not because they believe it is really a viable option, said Citizens Facilities Advisory Committee cochairman Randall Stark, but because they “want to be able to rule it out with confidence.”
“It is more of a confirmation exercise,” he said.
Committee members Kraig Sadownikow and Randy Marquardt said community members were asking why a school building was being demolished at a time when the district is short on facility space.
Superintendent Pat Herdrich said that the Badger Middle School referendum question voters approved addressed handicapped accessibility issues at the building, not growth. The district was twice cited by the Office of Civil Rights because the structure, now slated for demolition, did not meet present-day standards.
Contractors Bill Pennoyer, senior project manager of VJS Construction Services, and Robert Vajgrt, principal architect of Eppstein Uhen, said to keep the building at this point in the process would present a host of obstacles, including site, mechanical, drainage, traffic flow and parking problems. Preserving the building would also result in the elimination of the relocated football field and track.
Yes, the building isn’t up to code, but does that mean it’s useless? It’s served the community for decades. Could it be of use for a few more years as the district deals with space issues? Could it serve as offices or space for extracurricular activities? Anything? It’s worth a look.