I forget who, or how many, I was discussing my many hats (the additional jobs beyond your primary duties) but I had about 4-5 this year. Safety Manager, Safety Auditor, Compliance Auditor, and Quality Management. Then I have my primary task, which (at that time) was mostly letter writing policy and procedures in a training facility. Here's what I found (and this was my Objective evidence) of Non-Compliance.
New research suggests multiple faults ruptured in succession in the 10th century in the Puget Sound area.
My (probably exaggerated) fear of even visiting the Pacific NW is more than reflected by the residents who know absolutely nothing about the many potential hazards of living there. #geology#hazards#nature#earthquake
I'm saying compare the #decision as to whether to search this landfill to the history of similar choices made by the same #authorities, rather than to other decisions made by different authorities (cities, provinces).
The #hazards are significant. #Refuse has really poor #structural qualities. People are #killed every year when the hole they're digging in a landfill while looking for #valuables collapses.
I’m saying 3 landfillls were searched in Toronto and no expense was spared because the guy was white.
Yeah, agreed! Toronto is bigger and has more money flowing through it (millions of folks vs around half a million IIRC), but those are the only two differences that I can see, and the 2nd one is remedied by asking and inviting the feds (or even another province) for help/to help.
I'm saying compare the #decision as to whether to search this landfill to the history of similar choices made by the same #authorities, rather than to other decisions made by different authorities (cities, provinces).
Sure. (Not sure why, actually, that it makes sense to limit the decisions just to the ones made by Winnipeg, but for the sake of argument...)
But I wasn't familiar with past WInnipeg cases. When did Winnipeg ever agree to do a landfill search before for remains of someone that was an indigenous woman?
The #hazards are significant. #Refuse has really poor #structural qualities. People are #killed every year when the hole they're digging in a landfill while looking for #valuables collapses.
That may be so, but the article about the report regarding the process (which I indirectly linked to) points out how it can be done far more safely. Granted, it doesn't say zero risk, but the conveyor belt idea is a stroke of genius.
They know this for certain because some traces were found in the bins, ... because they suspect - but have no proof
Makes sense. Like, if I had lost a hard disk containing millions of dollars worth of bitcoin, and the above was the difference in odds, then I'd likely just give up and not even try in the latter case, with those kind of odds.
Considering what's at stake here though, if those odds were the only difference, then I'd say it's still a lead worth pursuing.
I'm an incoming Ph.D. student in the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, advised by Dr. Miyuki Hino.