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|    calgary.general    |    A very nice Canuck city, no libtard BS    |    176,774 messages    |
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|    Message 176,200 of 176,774    |
|    Daryl Kabatoff to All    |
|    If I Was Mayor of Saskatoon - Part One -    |
|    02 Mar 20 18:39:02    |
      From: doukhoborarchivescanada@gmail.com              If I Was Mayor of Saskatoon - Part One - By Daryl Kabatoff        March 2nd 2020 AD 8:34 pm 23,350 words              Material Within Features:       Aviation, Boating, TIG Welding       Banking and Wealth Management       Diamonds, Gold and Money       Largest Building in Saskatchewan       British, German and Russian History       High School Students, Hockey Players       Gun Laws and Native Governance       Restaurants and Fine Dining       Religion and Humor              If I was mayor of the City of Saskatoon I’d end of the money grab of the 30       km/hour school zones. The schools should post reduced speeds but with       illuminated, blinkin’ and more frequent signage. There should be no fine       print on traffic speed signs,        it is unreasonable for drivers to slow down to read fine print on street       signs, then check the date and time of day to see if the information conveyed       applies to them. There should be no reduced speeds in school zones when the       students are inside the        schools, so at the start of classes the speeds on the illuminated and       blinkin’ signs should return to 50 km/hour and cease blinkin’. The speed       should only be reduced to 30 km/hour for 30 minutes before the start of       classes, during the lunch hour, and        for 30 minutes at the end of the school day.              An end to reduced speed limits near high school for the high school students       should have learned how to cross streets before graduating from grade 8. High       school students who impede traffic by recklessly crossing streets should face       fines to help pay for        the cost of the new brightly blinkin’ 30 km/hour school zone signs and to       reduce home and business taxes.              Reimburse the money of the ticketed drivers who were fined for exceeding the       poorly marked 30 km/hour school zone limits. Drivers who were ticketed in       these zones for speeds up to and including 55 km/hour should have their fines       cancelled and money        returned. This reimbursement should be funded by ticketing drivers who are in       violation of traffic laws. Enforcing the fines for unattached trailers left on       streets will go a long way in raising money to reimburse the drivers who were       ticketed in the        school-zone money grabs. The poorly made and poorly placed signage has       resulted in not just traffic fines, but in increased insurance rates, together       these increased costs resulted in the loss of mobility to some citizens, City       Council should work to        refund all these losses incurred by their negligence.              Increased the number of speed limit signs. Some 60 km/hour zones are so poorly       posted that drivers have not seen the existing one or two signs and instead       travel at slower or faster speeds. Signs indicating speed limits should be       posted regularly along        streets and freeways, on every second or third light pole or power pole.       Several of the 50 km/hour zones can be increased to 60 km/hour, and several 60       km/hour zones should be increased to 70 or 80 km/hour.              Improved traffic flow by increasing speeds on Chief Mistawasis Bridge and on       the roadways leading to and from this bridge. Improved traffic flow by       connecting Clancy drive to 18th Street, passing beneath Circle Drive as this       will alleviate the congestion        on 22nd Street and Circle Drive. Improved traffic flow by widening sections of       Circle Drive so that merging onto this freeway will become far less dangerous.       Taylor Street should be moving 4 lanes of traffic at 60 km/hour, if a high       school insists upon        lower speeds during school hours, then get your blinkin’ signs to       communicate the lower speeds in a clear and in an unambiguous manner. Put some       study into alleviating congestion on Circle Drive between Avenue C and Millar       Avenue. An overpass at        Highway 12 and Marquis Drive is required but should be delayed due to       mismanagement of city finances, and when it does finally get built it should       have enough clearance to allow farmers to transport their grain bins.              Improved traffic flow by re-routing the Yellowhead Highway to either one or       two miles west of Dalmeny Road, and connecting to the existing Gordie Howe       Bridge via a new road located between Cedar Villa Estates and the CN rail       yard. This would be hundreds        of millions of dollars cheaper than building a proposed bypass on the far east       side of the city; furthermore having traffic totally bypassing the city will       negatively affect local businesses and result in an additional hundreds of       millions of dollars of        lost revenue. If the provincial and federal governments desire to fund a       bypass, then utilize Grasswoods Road and a new Grasswoods Bridge and have CPR       locate their new bridge there as well. It would be in error to get       Saskatoonians to pay for a traffic        bypass for it would negatively impact businesses for decades to come, as was       done in Regina.              Improve the traffic flow on Idylwyld Drive by widening the street to 6 or 8       lanes and perhaps give the buildings lining the street a European style       similar to, matching or blending into the style of the Bessborough Hotel or       the old Eaton’s building on        3rd Avenue South. Beautifying the city will improve the lives of the       merchants, the residents and the visitors.              Reduced property taxes via the enforcement of existing traffic laws. Ticket       drivers who hang any obstacles to vision, such as dream catchers, on their       rear-view mirrors. Ticket the drivers who debadge their vehicles and obscure       their license plates.        Ticket the drivers who tint their front windows. Ticket drivers who fail to       come to a complete stop at red lights and stop signs. Ticket the owners of the       unattached trailers left on the streets.              Removal of red-light cameras, it is a cash grab that largely benefits those       who own the cameras.              End to dedicated bike lanes, instead seek to improve road surfaces where       bicycles are numerous. Most bicyclists in Saskatoon don’t want bicycles and       bike lanes, they instead want automobiles and their own houses.              The city should work to remove lead from pipes and also bury power lines to       insure the city doesn’t suffer power outages during ice storms.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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