“The hours are long, the workload can
be overwhelming. The people you work for don't always like you and,
after four years, they can fire you without saying why.” so says
the opening commentary
in a recent article highlighting the retirement of some Mps this
coming fall.
Retiring MP Brad Trost (Conservative, Saskatoon—University) who endured a similar weekly commute between Ottawa and Saskatoon, said he was surprised by the daily grind of parliamentary business. "I had the vision that there was going to be a lot of meetings. I just had no clue how many meetings there would be," said Trost. "We do meetings beyond meetings, and meetings about meetings here in Ottawa."
What struck me most I not so much the
long hours and endless meeting required in legislature business by
the job, that is perhaps a greater burden than many of us who are not
involved first hand realize but after what appears to be long days of
such activities for SOME Mps their week then is book-ended by
traveling time to and from their home riding and family. From Cape
Breton to Saskatoon to Kootenay to the Northwest Territories these
MPs must put in many hours commuting back and forth to Ottawa where
some of the fellow MPs are just a relativly short travel time away.
It strikes me that there is room for
more use of virtual commuting where by distant representatives can
attend meetings and even the proceedings in The House by
teleconferencing, Sure there will be times when personal face to face
meetings are necessary but surely given the way many world wide
bushiness operate nowadays daily face to face meetings are more
traditional than necessary? Many such meetings are already broadcast
where such discussions are public and the technology exists to have
private or semiprivate discussions in the virtual reality world, such
accommodation would free up our MPs to be more responsive to and have
a better understanding of their local populations concerns.
Perhaps by the time the renovations to
the House of Commons are complete the whole place will be but a
museum where tour guides can say “Once upon a time this was where
MPs traveled hundreds of miles just to listen to the government and
opposition argue about who said what to whoom.”
Just asking!
2 comments:
The Digital Revolution has cut down Time and Distance, Rural. There has to be a way to apply that advantage to our politics.
So many in the political sphere seem to have a vested interest in dragging their feet when it comes to change .....except when it suits their purpose Owen.
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