Posts Tagged ‘Detroit’

Water

July 8th, 2010 by John Feehery

If you Google the search term “water main break,” you get close to 6 million hits.

In the Washington D.C. area, the suburb of Potomac is dealing with a huge water main break that has spewed water 50 feet in the air.

That is nothing compared to the water main break in Boston last month, which nearly created a panic for Red Sox fans everywhere.

Philly had a bad water main break, as did Los Angeles, Detroit, Muncie, Richmond, Hackensack, Atlanta, Cleveland, Stamford, and Pittsburgh.  Odds are that a water main broke at a town near you.

Water is one of those things that we all need to survive.

Earth is about 75 percent water and muscles in the human body have about the same percentage, so without water, we are basically screwed.

Delivering water is an essential government responsibility.  Governments that don’t come up with an effective water allocation plan are completely useless and tend to collapse quickly.

When a water main breaks, it puts a tremendous strain on local governments, especially these days when most of them are going broke anyway.

Nobody’s Perfect

June 4th, 2010 by John Feehery

Jim Joyce

Maybe Jim Joyce should run for President.

This is the only guy out there who admits he is not perfect.  And that refreshing bit of honesty has inspired America.

Joyce is the umpire who blew the call in Detroit the other day, and his blown call ruined a perfect game pitched by Armando Galarraga on the last out of the game.

Joyce put it this way.  “I just missed the damn call…This isn’t a call.  This is a history call. And I kicked the shit out of it.  I take pride in this job, and I took a perfect game away from that kid over there who worked his ass off all night.”

Every time I see this story on the tube, I tear up a bit.  Not only did Joyce take complete responsibility and take his lumps like a man, but the aggrieved pitcher, Armando Galarraga, was unbelievably gracious in response.  He almost felt sorry for the umpire.  He didn’t cry like a baby.  He didn’t bitterly complain.  He acted like an adult, like a mature human being, like a grown up.  How rare in this world!