Opinion is often not based on fact, making it merely gossip. I remember my own life, my history, my intentions. I share my version of my life as it is me who has lived it. I own my opinion and feelings and my journey. One day, someone may enjoy some of what I have written. What I write is not yet known as it is still inside of me.
Monday, September 26, 2011
My Grandfathers Diaries
My Grandfather wrote a diary when at the first world war and now many of us get so much from them. They mean something to each of us who read them. They will have different meaning to each individual who reads them and they will have an affect on each one of us in different ways. Last night I watched the TV One, Sunday programme and saw a war diary returned from NZ to Italy to a man aged 96. That little book, his written words became a big story throughout NZ and for the town the man lived in in Italy. Such a beautiful story! Its beautiful partly because it is history . That lovely mans history. We never want to live in the past we always want to look for bright futures but living with history, like my grandfathers war diaries are a part of our personal and our countryman's history. We must cherish it as part of our place on earth. Sadly too many have left this world without sharing their history through their eyes.
Sunday, September 25, 2011
No one knows what they will feel
No one ever knows what they will feel when they loose a sibling. Today I lost one of mine. But you never loose the memories of the life you shared. You always have the good times with you as long as you live. Its a good time to reflect on those good times and good memories as they are who you were together. They dont have the influence or the opinion of anyone but the time the two of you had. No one can take away what you had in those years as young innocent kids. Blind mans bluff was the scary dark and little did we know then that life was full of scary dark but also full of beautiful sun shine. On the rainy days and in the thunderstorms we still had the legacy and the test of life to participate in. When we have life together we have opportunity, when their is death we have memories that are always alive and we see the legacy's that has been left behind. RIP John.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Oh those power companies
The Cherrywood Shopping Center (Tauranga) pre-planned power shut down has been and gone but where will the corporate giant strike next?
What planet are these guys on? Shutting down a shopping centre all day in this day and age is mindboggling. Most people agree that electrical power maintenance work has to be done. No right minded person would think differently.
However gone are the days where business closes on a Friday and reopens on a Monday – allowing such maintenance to be carried out - that’s simply historic.
Powerco is a lines company and they deliver the power throughout the region for the retailers, such as Trustpower, Mercury, Genesis etc. who sell it to us. In Tauranga Powerco are the only delivery company. They have the monopoly so can be bullies and do what they want. They are not NZ owned and in reality have no care in the world about us - the little people – well, little as they see us.
Powerco told shop owners they would rather take complaints than spend the money on consultation or provide generators - an interesting business culture indeed.
So what was the process taken to inform the businesses in Cherrywood that they would have no power on Sunday 21 August 201, to run their businesses? The process consisted of letters from the retailers, sent out with no coordination, stating power would be off on 21 August 2011. End of story.
In a commercial world it is reasonable to expect consultation, negotiation followed by consistent and coordinated, notification. But no, none of this happened. Is that reasonable? As the shops all use the different retail suppliers such as Trustpower, Mercury, Genesis, there was no consistent coordination or notification to the group of shops. Each company did its own notification, at different times. In fact the Cherrywood restaurant was the last to find out officially 13 days before the shutdown was to take place. The restaurant specialises in group functions and can take bookings months in advance so this was an issue..
It was only by chance that the restaurant was made aware of the shutdown, because of the local shop owners chatting amongst themselves – they had already had their notices from Trustpower and Mercury but Genesis, who the restaurant uses, were behind the eight ball on their notices. The Restaurant had a booking for fifty people on 21 August 2011, so when staff learned of the shutdown on Friday 5 August it caused consternation.
The maintenance Powerco were planning could not safely be done at night and it had to be done during the day. Powerco should have arranged an alternative supply (i.e. a generator) or consulted with the affected businesses to determine the most suitable time for all parties. Powerco would have been planning the maintenance for months, these things just don’t happen overnight.
Well the critics said the restaurant should stop complaining and get on with it and just get generator. But the critics do not understand the logistics and safety requirement of that. Getting a generator for the whole complex was the most practical and safest way (to meet OSH requirements) for the restaurant to connect to generated power. It’s a vastly different exercise to get a small generator to connect to lights and small appliances than it is to connect cool rooms, refrigerators, freezers and ovens. Getting a sufficient generator to provide the restaurant could have also supplied all the shopping block. Supplying the restaurant and including the shopping block requires professional expertise, so who better than to provide the generator but the power companies.
Its hard economic times and small businesses can ill afford a shutdown for a day. Even in the good times, how do we allow a big overseas company to operate, running roughshod over the small businesses? There was no consultation and when we spoke to them they refused to consider any alternatives. Other Lines Companies provide generators in such circumstances so what’s up with Powerco?
The Minister of Energy’s office, The Member of Parliament for Tauranga, Hon Simon Bridges, His Worship the Mayor, Stuart Crosby, The CEO of the Chamber of Commerce Max Mason and the Bay of Plenty Times editor, Scott Inglis, agreed with us. They all wrote or spoke to Powerco, but Powerco wouldn’t budge and then they got personal – that showed they were rattled but not enough to do anything positive about it.
The exposure had some affect though as on Powerco’s website they say ....“Think of us as the delivery people transporting the energy for the retailer consistently and efficiently to ensure that you can count on having the energy you need all day, everyday” and they quickly updated their webpage adding a disclaimer. Imagine a small business, in the PC world we live in, advertising a product or service and not providing it – some big official department would be on it like a ton of bricks. Come on Ministry of Consumers Affairs why have you not challenged these giants?
At Powerco there is no customer service as they don’t consider us to be customers. They say their customers are the retailers ie. Trustpower, Mercury, Genesis etc. In general the retailers say it is Powerco’s responsibility because they own the lines and undertake the maintenance. In reality no one is accountable to the customer/consumer.
After the shutdown and the article in the Bay of Plenty Times, Trustpower contacted us and said they thought Powerco’s actions were onerous and in the future they would consider providing a generator- and not all of the shops in the block are Trustpower customers. GOOD ON YOU Trustpower that is customer service.
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