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The Rural Voice, 2005-10, Page 13pot &groat "TOYS FOR THE BIG BOYS & GIRLS" 1 Owner - Immaculate M \,,..... i;. 2002 DODGE DAKOTA SPORT 4X4 • 4 door Crew Cob • 4.7 L V8 • fully loaded • prospector cob high cap • bedliner • low kms. • silver $18,950 certified 1 Owner - Only 79 Kms. ;, rix. ... "' 2001 CHEV TRACKER 4x4 • 2.0 L 4 cyl. automatic • 4 door • fully equipped • step up bars • fuel friendly $11,995 certified 1 Owner - Only 80 Kms. t I ,A 2000 PONTIAC AZTEK • 4 door •3.4 L V6 automatic • loaded • fuel friendly • real nice - test drive $14,995 certified HOURS: Mon. 9-5; Tues., Wed., Thurs. 9-6; Fri. 9-5; Sat. 9-3 I don't want to sell you a vehicle, I want to help you buy one. "?jauK `,tack Specialist" HWY. #6 CHATSWORTH Office/Fax: 519-794-2765 8 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Now that would be a paradigm shift! Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Bluth, ON. I haven't heard anybody speak about a "paradigm shift" for a while now. Ten years ago the phrase was everywhere. Mossadiq Umedaly needs a paradigm shift, or whatever they've calling a complete change of thinking these days. , Umedaly is the chairman of Xantrex Technology Inc. of Burnaby, B.C. and you're probably most familiar with his products from those Canadian Tire ads about the rechargeable portable power packs that look like a ghetto blaster but provide an emergency power source. But Umedaly has a more far-reach- ing vision. Last October his company introduced a home system in the U.S. that harvests and processes energy from solar panels and feeds it into the power grid. He believes the world's electrical grids will increasingly be powered by a web of non-traditional sources: millions of home rooftops, wind and solar farms. "We're going to have an Internet of electricity," he told Report on Business magazine. Ah the Internet. Talk about a paradigm change. For a century we'd been un a centralizing kick with information and resources concentrated in a few places. Instead of hundreds of little creameries and cheese plants throughout the countryside, we concentrated production in a few mega plants. Instead of thousands of little shops selling a wide variety of goods from a wide variety of sources, we've boiled retailing down to mega stores owned by huge corporations who wield so much market clout they dominate the production of goods. The Internet reversed the trend. Now there's a far-flung system of production and distribution of information, from websites set up by little stores, and craftspeople to people throwing their opinions out to the world through web -logs. Imagine if the internet and people like Umedaly could shift the mindset of society and its movers and shakers to look at our system of organization differently? Rural areas would be the first to benefit. Until the last couple of decades farming was an example of the kind of thinking Umedaly proposes. We produced our food on thousands of farms each producing a little bit which added up to a lot. Recently the industrial model of concentration and specialization has taken over farming, with larger and larger livestock facilities, for instance. Umedaly's idea of thousands of tiny energy production pinpoints mimics nature. We get the oxygen in our air, not from one big manufac- turer, but from billions of trees and plants. We get our water from trillions of tiny rain drops. But paradigm shifts are easier to talk about than accomplish. The status quo has powerful friends. The provincial government's first attempt to encourage wind power. for instance, saw it turn to large companies, instead of making it easier for neighbourhood -owned wind projects. Hydro One still sets up roadblocks for small power producers to feed into the grid. They prefer to deal with a few major producers not thousands of little guys as Umedaly envisions. The normal reaction to new technology on the part of the reigning powers is generally to try to take it over. Even the miracle of modern communications, for instance, has led to a corporate structure where all decision-making is concentrated in a central headquarters based on inform- ation gathered at the local level. Look at how OMAFRA closed its county offices and concentrated all inform- ation dissemination from Guelph. I hope Umedaly is right. I like his vision a lot better than I like the centralized, homogeneous world of today's decision makers. He's in a tight battle, though, with those who like things the way they are.0