Here, too. When MIL passes on, we'll be dumping the landline in favor of Skype and our cells.Wireless technology sure. Land line service has been ridiculous since Alberta deregulated and privatized.
Here, too. When MIL passes on, we'll be dumping the landline in favor of Skype and our cells.Wireless technology sure. Land line service has been ridiculous since Alberta deregulated and privatized.
Wireless technology sure. Land line service has been ridiculous since Alberta deregulated and privatized.
2. still have popular representation in that consumers woud have voting rights on the board of directors, not to mention that the government could still protect non-consumers from it too.
Who would buy shares in a company that gives its customers voting privileges without buying shares?
In a consumer's co-op system, each consumer could be required to buy a share before he could partake of the services of the company.
I don't see any difference between a consumer coop and a municipally run utility system since everybody needs to be tied to it and they already have a vote. Seems like more duplication to me.
I don't see any difference between a consumer coop and a municipally run utility system since everybody needs to be tied to it and they already have a vote. Seems like more duplication to me.
This could also mean having to scrap minimumwages possibly.
That wouldn't hurt my feelings, minimum wage has caused more problems than they've ever solved.
A better way to protect workers from exploitative or unscrupulous employers would just be to give them voting rights in the company. But in the end, if the company has no money, it has no money, and no amount of minimum wages will change that.
Which would you prefer between the following two systems, overall:
1. The government taxes us with high taxes, and then uses that money to provide services for us.
2. The government mandates certain responsibilities on the private sector to provide certain services to the public, and limits its revenue to the sale of crown resources, fines, and service fees.
I realise that there is always some of both, but my question is which one do you tend to lean towards most.
Are we talking about private contractors working for government ministries on a fee for service or private ownership of services? or both?
Having done a fair bit of contract work for highways, forestry and environment ministries I am confidant that private contractors could do the work much cheaper than government union employees and still make a fair profit. Where the problem araises is the sheer volume of paper work they want for no real reason that drags your efficiency down to close to their level.
I worked for the Ministry of Highways in survey and design for 35 years and our experience with Consultants wasn't too good. Generally speaking project costs were higher and they required too much supervision to get them to adhere to our standards and a lot of them just didn't have the years of expertise that the Department people had. I guess the one advantage is there was no obligation to keep them hired on for longer than they were needed for a specific project. A few of them that were any good quite often ended up employed directly by the Gov.'t anyway.
LIke I said months ago, is a dinghy better off at high tide than at low tide?