Archive for February, 2010


Well, today is great.  My daughter fences and yesterday we spent the entire day in Charlottesville at a tournament.  Normally smaller tournaments do not take all day but fencing tournaments, like other events that include lots of kids and only a few organizers, vary wildly in execution.  My conspiracy theorist side thinks that organizers like tournaments so much that they inflict these all day affairs on the rest of us…:)

Fencing tournaments are executed thusly:  everyone fences everyone (“pool bouts”) to establish rankings and then you fence in single elimination matches to see who wins.  Erin has normally fenced well in the pool bouts but when the pressure of single elimination came, she had a tough time.  I don’t know if that particular monkey is off her back but she did very well in single elimination yesterday and came in 2nd place.  Sarah and I are very proud of her.

On another subject: I happened to be flipping channels this morning and came accross a movie on HBO called “Smile Pinki”.  I did not see the entire show but it takes place in India.  I’ve never been to India but it appears to be a place of wild clashes of culture to the point that I think it’s difficult for people from the west to really understand it.  Before I started my own company, I had several Indian colleagues at different places of employ, at least one of whom I considered a good friend.  He was a brilliant software engineer who graduated from the Indian equivalent of MIT.  One day we were at a Thai restaurant in Herndon and he relayed to me just how long it took him to get to his parent’s house in India: a flight across the Atlantic, a bus ride, a train ride and then ox cart.  I remember thinking at the time that this all sounded very involved but that I understood it.  I can tell you that after seeing this movie, I didn’t.

The central character in the movie is an adorable little girl from an extremely rural part of India (her village has at least several mud huts) who has a cleft palate.  The film makers follow her on her trip to a hospital in an Indian city that specializes in fixing these kinds of birth defects.  It’s a real eye opener.  The difference between their hospitals and ours is stark.  It seems so different that I wonder at the difference in outcomes for the patients.

The part of the movie that really summed it up for me is when Pinki and her father go to “check in” at the hospital.  Check-in is held in an open-air mad house where you go to the desk, answer some questions and they give you a number.  Then you go wait awhile for your number to be called.  This ain’t a waiting room – it looks like it is just an outdoor area.  Pinki’s father, when asked for a phone number at check-in, hands the clerk a small book and points to a number.  The clerk looks at him and says “sir, this is an amount of money, not a phone number.”

After the successful operation, the father gets a clerk to call a phone number in his village to pass along the good news.  The clerk dials the number and hands the phone to the father.  The father holds the phone to his head but it’s immediately obvious that he’s just mimicking what he has seen other people do – he doesn’t know how to use the phone!  The clerk, nonplussed, reaches across the desk and helps him get the earpiece in place……It’s a great and happy story as Pinki’s palate is repaired but the differences between here and there are just jarring.

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Last Updated on Sunday, 28 February 2010 11:23

It’s a little early yet but the MJM ran an article today indicating that Senator Colgan may not run again.  I say it’s a little early as the biggest variable in the next race – redistricting – won’t happen until next winter.  The list of typical suspects to run to replace the Senator is pretty long at this early date.  The ones I can pull off the top of my head are Mayor Parrish, Del. Miller, Carroll Weimer, Bob Fitzsimmonds, Rex Parr, Supervisor Covington and Sup. Stirrup.  Greg has a post up about it as well and he includes Mrs. Bass in that list.  I hadn’t heard that before but I suppose any sitting politician in the County and City could be included.

For my part, I would hope that, if Senator Colgan decides to reture, that the community dwells for awhile on the tremendous service he has provided to his district over the years before we too wound up about the race to replace.  I think it’s a hell of a job to stay in office that long and still get stuff done….

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Last Updated on Thursday, 25 February 2010 08:45

Okay, as I get more links available I’ll put ‘em up. I would offer that the headline news in the City Manager’s budget is that we cut another 20 positions. To give you an idea of how serious it is, that includes 2 police officers. I’ve only been on the Council 4 years but we have added officers every year I believe.   Overall spending (Schools and City) is reduced by about $5 million.

To help everyone keep things straight, the Council will be working on the FY 2011 budget.  We are currently in FY2010

Linkage:

For comparison to what is coming, an overview of the current (FY 2010) budget is here
A calendar of budget meetings is here
City Manager Proposed FY 2011 Budget is here

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 February 2010 12:21

It is Sunday afternoon, with pretty consistent sunshine and reasonable temperatures – about a week after the blizzard to end all blizzards. I just got back from a bike ride! It was nice enough that I just had to go and ride my normal 11 mile course to see how my indoor training is preparing me for the spring.

I rode my hybrid bike – the road bike is setup for the trainer and has the trainer tire on the back. The trainer tire has thicker rubber and no tread. It’s built to take the heat that riding on the trainer generates as the roller and the tire meet. I started off using the trainer with a regular tire – against the advice of the local bike shop – and ruined it. In my defense, it didn’t feel that hot…. The other reason I rode the hybrid is the sidewalks are still a mess and there is sand everywhere. Better to have the wider tires that would help with the sand. Compared to the road bike and despite my experiment earlier in the year, I still feel like I’m pushing a brick when I ride that thing.

So, I pushed that brick 11 miles in 42 minutes! That isn’t half bad. My best time at the end of the fall was 35 minutes on the road bike. It does seem like the trainer is producing decent results. However, one thing I did notice that I had some trouble handling climbs or other high-output scenarios. I guess that does make some sense: the trainer that I have does not provide peak challenges that would drive my heart rate over 165 or so. I can adjust the resistance and gears so I can get a good workout but it doesn’t peak well. I can live with it.

I think I’ll be in pretty good shape for my first ride which is the 50 mile Hampton Roads Diabetes ride April 17th.

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Last Updated on Sunday, 21 February 2010 01:42

Well, we’re halfway home! “Crossover day” which is the halfway point in the General Assembly session and where the house and senate exchange bills has come! Many of the more onerous bills have failed but there are a few new ones that we’ll have to deal with.

The day that all local government people look forward to is March 13th. That’s the day that the General Assembly adjourns and the locals know that no further damage can be done. At that point, we start making sense of how those in Richmond have, in their wisdom, changed things.

Lately those changes normally include reductions to the amount of money they send and, in some cases, attempting to eliminate locally imposed taxes (stick to your knitting Richmond). There hasn’t been much useful change in non-fiscal policy this year. Mostly fiddling that doesn’t have much impact at the local level. This isn’t surprising or even bad: the economy and the budget are the main issue to deal with so I’m glad that it has received the attention that it deserves.

We’ll see what shakes out and I’ll report back if significant changes occur.

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Last Updated on Saturday, 20 February 2010 08:38