Sunday, August 31, 2008
Monday, August 25, 2008
Tesco - Every little helps ( 10 or less )
I was shopping at Tesco today for a few odds and ends and bought the usual 20 Felix trays Xena and Gabrielle enjoy. Imagine my surprise at the checkout when the woman said to me 'You can only buy 10 items or less from Tesco, but in this case I'll make an exception' ( It's worth pointing out that I'm not talking about a '10 item or less' checkout here). I could not let that one go, so replied 'That won't clearly count for foil trays of catfood where you even sell them in packs of 48'. She repeated her 'jobsworth' mantra of only 10 items or less. I was actually a bit annoyed at this, seeing as 10 trays would not last me 2 days and makes a visit to Tesco unviable, so went over to customer services to find out if this was the case. The woman there 'reassured' me that the rule was put in place to stop ethnic minorities buying up all the cheap 'buy one get one free' offers for their own shops and would be ok for me to buy more than 10 foils of catfood. So there we have it......Tesco - Inflexibility and Racism. I would suggest that if they are limiting numbers of goods then they clearly either don't have enough stock or else they are using them as 'loss leaders'. Either way, limiting to 10 is not a fair solution.Monday, August 18, 2008
Why we wear Lanyards
There are a few problems with this setup that I can see. The lanyard is too long which although if short can limit mobility, too long will make any fall dangerous. Secondly and more importantly, the anchor point should be above, so limiting the fall. Clearly in the above setup, the worker will hit the ground before the lanyard takes the strain. He is also carrying out work on a ladder which should only be a last resort if a platform can not be used. He is also working alone which should never be done when working at height. He is not wearing a hard hat and the ladders are not secured ( plus the feet are sitting on the movable rags ). He is working with a pot of paint and a brush on the ladder, meaning that he will only have his feet as two points of contact rather than the three at all times which is good practice. Other than that, all looks ok.
Saturday, August 16, 2008
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Raising the Dead?
I was walking past the Ramshorn Kirk on Ingram street yesterday and noticed that workers were replacing the pavement with a very attractive new one. Full credit to the council in that the new pavements are a great improvement and a joy to walk over without fear of tripping. It reminded me however of a piece of history about the Ramshorn kirk I read a few years ago, about how the widening of Ingram street had meant that graves now lay under the current pavement. No concern seemed to be given about disturbing the graves of those dignitaries of Glasgow's past. Here is a passage from Strathclyde Universities 'History of the Ramshorn Kirk' :
The Foulis Brothers, founders of the early newspaper ‘The Glasgow Courant’, which eventually became ‘The Herald’, are buried under the pavement in Ingram Street. Their remains were not disturbed when the street was widened. They are commemorated with a concrete paving stone engraved RF + AF.
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