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The Rural Voice, 2001-06, Page 10'Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 101 YEARS EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associations • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED yr;w:�fw Now Available WOOL ADVANCE PAYMENTS ' Skirted Fleeces Well -Packed Sacks For more information contact: WINGHAM WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 2, Wingham, Ontario Phone/Fax 519-357-1058 6 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Adventures in `efficiency' Ah. the wonders of the wired world. It allows us to deal with some- one hundreds of miles away instead of face to face. Of course the idea is sometimes better than the reality. Take one recent episode. After having our lane under ater several times from last year's torrential rains flooding down off the half - mile -long hill- side, we decided this spring to build up the lane and put drains under it. First job: call Bell Canada for the location of the buried line. Looked simple. Call the 1-800 number and report the details. Of course there was the obligatory electronic answering service and the "push -one -for -this". Then it was the "your -call -is - important -to -us -so please -hang -on - the -phone -for -another -ten -minutes" message, repeated every 30 seconds. By the time you finally talk to a human you're wound like a clock. And then the fun begins. The operator asked for my telephone number, then my name and address. This being Bell Canada, I figured if they had my telephone number they'd already have my name and address so this must be some sort of double check. It wasn't. We went through a long series of questions including my 911 address and the nearest cross-roads on my concession, then she asked me to hold while she looked for the maps of the area. Another long wait while I tried to find something productive to do so my day wouldn't be totally wasted. Then she was back to try to determine the location they were supposed to do a locate on. It became like a man with no tongue talking to a woman who was blind and deaf. Despite the fact all our local roads have been renamed and renumbered according to Bell Canada specific- ations, apparently nobody told Bell Canada. Using one of the cross-roads Communicating in the age of communications I had given her, she first tried to tell me I lived at the corner of the county road four miles north. Mystified, I told her I lived closer to another county road several miles south of that. She then tried to get from me details of how one would get from that county road, which ran parallel to my concession, to my place. The best I could figure out was that her map only had county roads on it. Finally twigging to this fact, I gave her directions from a north -south county road. I'm worried, though, because though they promised service within two working days, as this is written four days later, nobody's showed up yet. Now if I had met one of the local Bell servicemen on the street, we could have arranged this within 15 seconds. Instead it took at least 15 minutes of long distance line time, not to mention the operator's time and frustration. The local worker would have known instantly how to get to my place. Heaven knows if they'll be able to read her directions. They may end up painting red lines on somebody else's lane. But this is efficiency in the new millennium. We've just spent a fortune in rural Ontario installing 911 numbers so that in times of emerg- ency we can talk to an operator in Ottawa who can then talk to our local fire department or police and given them numbers they can understand. These same 911 addresses will soon be required on our mail as well, even though they'll actually make more work for rural mail carriers. They'll have to sort the 911 -address- ed mail into rural routes, which we currently have in our address. But this is efficiency in the homogenized, one -size -fits -all model for business and government in our era. Where does the next efficiency come in? My fear is when managers discover that if they can have your 911 call answered in Ottawa, they can just as easily have it answered in Haiti where people will be happy to work for $1 a day. I'm going to start practicing my French.0 Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Blyth, ON.