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- 15,259
- Location
- Arlington, Virginia
Commercial doors and entrances. Installed Friday.
I wouldn't be a cop nowadays if they paid me millions.
There was a time in my life I would have done it for free. That passed a long time ago. #dont miss it.
It stinks on ice now. Everyone attacks them and they can't fight back. :doh:
Being a flatfoot stinks.
That's a very worthy job. We could use one of those around here.
Very tough to find Vets that want to take the shifts required to operate 24/7. Luckily I have two partners who are ER docs and are also bringing some other docs who are used to ER shifts. It should fill a big need in our area,
We also share the philosophy that it's good business to make our services reasonably priced.
Currently working on opening a 24 hour Animal emergency clinic. Hope to be up and running by 4th of July weekend.
It stinks on ice now. Everyone attacks them and they can't fight back. :doh:
Being a flatfoot stinks.
A lot of that's simply a counterreaction to the fast-and-loose attitude toward documentation in the past. The doctor who killed my older brother in 1962 got away with gross negligence and likely avoided criminal charges simply by falsifying the paperwork, and there was no system of double and triple checking to catch up with him. Nobody cared, it was just some faceless twenty-three-year old woman and her lunkhead GI husband who could easily be conned into accepting a song-and-dance explanation for what happened. It wasn't until my mother actually worked in the hospital herself and got hold of some "hidden" files that she found out the truth, and by then the doctor himself was dead.
The inconveniences of today are penance for the gross sins of the past.
I have friends and / or relatives in all these roles and, yes, they all have their political arguments of who, why, what "ruined" their job, but one thing they all complain about is the amount of time they spend having to document what they do. My teacher friends tell me they are consumed with documentation, as do my doctor and banker friends. I have relative who is a sheriff (was a detective) and says his life is documentation (some call it "record keeping" or "reporting," but in the end, they are all talking about documentation).
...And worse, much of that documentation will be read by very few, including its intended recipient(s).
The case of our local "community chest" type charity organization is an example of underdocumentation in its rawest state. The president of the organization, a highly-respected local businessman and politcal figure, accepted donation checks and handled them himself. The only documentation was thru a bookkeeping firm run by his wife.
Last fall it was revealed that this paragon of business virtue had embezzeled nearly four million dollars in donor funds over the seventeen years he served as organization president. An audit of what books existed, coupled with a federal audit of all of the businessman's bank accounts has since documented that he stole nearly five million dollars out of the pockets, not just of donors, but of the needy members of the community who would have benefited from the charity's work.
Five. Million. Dollars.
He lived quite well on this money, buying himself a lavish home in the best part of one of the swankiest towns on the coast, along with a lakeside camp for the summer and a mountain ski retreat for the winter. He also contributed many thousands of dollars of this stolen money to political campaigns of his choice, ensuring that all the best people would look the other way, because after all, he was a dignfied holder of the Townsperson of the Year award handed out by the Chamber of Commerce. Yes indeed.
The charity has learned its lesson the hard way, and rigorous multi-layered documentation of all donations is now in place. The Townsperson of the Year, meanwhile, has pleaded guilty to federal charges of bank and tax fraud, and will hopefully be spending the rest of his life -- he's in his 80s -- in the custody of Uncle Sam, who will ensure that every worthless breath he takes is well and thoroughly documented, I'm sure.