Three new jargon words

One of the things that tickles me in the round of Council committee meetings I participate in each month is the plethora of different professions I am exposed to. Although my key interests on the council are on the transport / infrastructure side of things, I have made all sorts of forays into other bits. And every part of the council has its own special languages. Some of the words they use in reporting their work to councillors make me chuckle. Here are three recent examples

1 – “Dayburn”

Dayburn is how street lighting engineers refer to streetlights being on in the day. Street lighting is one small area of the Council that most people take for granted, until the light outside your house fails, flickers or is on in the day. At this time of year, hardworking councillors are out touring the streets in the dark noting down the numbers of failed lights.

If you live in Nottingham City and a light isn’t working – use this handy web form to report it to the Council. In my experience the emails you get from the website as a result of doing that are a little difficult to understand – but it does result in the light getting fixed within a few days. Don’t rely on other people to report it for you – some lights are out for weeks just because no-one reports it.

Nottingham is about to get a massive investment in streetlighting through a very long running PFI. Every street light will be replaced. The new ones will be much more energy efficient, resulting in more light for less power. They are changing the types of bulbs for ones which produce a whiter light, rather than the sodium orange we are all used to. The columns will all have the facility to be remotely controlled and remotely monitored, which should make “dayburn” a thing of the past. And it should be possible to dim them remotely and run them at less than 100% – although that facility will be used very carefully to make sure there are no knockon effects on crime.

2 – Sparge

Sparging is a fancy engineering word for cleaning, and when I first heard this word in a meeting about the district heating scheme, it nearly made me burst out laughing straight away. The person who said it dropped it into a sentence as if was the most ordinary word in the world and it was all I could do not to butt in and say, scuse me, did you just say “sparge” ? As it was, I made a note in a corner of a piece of paper and went home to look it up.

Nottingham has the largest district heating scheme in the UK, taking waste heat and steam from the incinerator and using it to heat thousands of homes in the St Anns area, as well as a huge number of municipal buildings and centres, including the Victoria Centre, the Broadmarsh centre, the Royal Centre and the Ice Arena. Steam is also supplied directly to Bio City where it runs the autoclaves and sterilising processes, and surplus steam is used to directly generate electricity. The scheme contributes to Nottingham’s success in generating its own energy.

But it’s not without controversy. The scheme has lost a lot of money in recent years, and the very idea of waste incineration is anathema to many environmental campaigners. My somewhat pragmatic view is that since the incinerator is there already, it’s much better to make use of the steam than not to. Tearing out the scheme and proving replacement heating systems for all the thousands of users would itself be an expensive thing to do that’s not in Nottingham’s interest.

3 – Dirty MRF (pronounced Merf to rhyme with smurf)

Waste management, one of the key roles for councils – in fact, bin collection is about the only completely universal service a council offers – has plenty of its own jargon, and key amongst those are the MRFs. It’s a phrase used so often that it’s now pronounceable as a word in its own right. A MRF is a materials recycling facility. If you have the sort of recycling bin where you mix up different types of recyclables, like card, glass and tins, the contents have to be taken to a MRF to sort them out. Clean MRFs sort out pre-sorted waste, but Dirty MRFs take a wider mix of waste, including kitchen and food waste, and sort out the reusable elements.

In Nottingham, our recycling bins are taken to a plant off the Colwick Loop Road where the lorries are emptied into huge piles which are shoveled onto a conveyor belt. The waste is sorted in a mix of automatic and manual ways – tins are removed and sorted magnetically, and then a small team of people hand sort the different sorts of plastic and paper. The tins are recycled into more tins. Some of the plastics are reused – milk bottles can easily become new milk bottles – but it is harder to find further uses for some other sorts of plastic. Some plastics are even recycled as fleecey coats! The paper and cardboard is taken a plant in the Netherlands where it is recycled as heavy board – the sort of board boardgames are made of, as well as the insides of lever arch files and the like.

Ah, politicians will use any excuse to get into a costume

I went on a trip to see the MRF at Colwick a few years ago and took a lot of photos I’ve never used or uploaded. I’ll pop ’em on Flickr and return to this topic another day.

Rochdale’s first female leader

News reaches t’Voice (via the Middleton Guardian) that Lib Dem Irene Davidson has become the new leader on Rochdale Council – and in doing so has become the first female leader of the Council.

Coun Davidson, who works as a prison officer in Manchester, will be replacing the leader Alan Taylor, who decided last week to stand down due to ill health.

Earlier this year, she stood in for Coun Taylor during one of his bouts of illness. She was acting leader when Rochdale hit the national news headlines after installing its Christmas light decorations in August.

Councillor Davidson said: “It is an honour and a priviliege to be the first female leader of Rochdale Council.”

Best wishes from all at the Voice to both Irene and Alan!

Tweets on 2009-12-22

  • @mawawa iPhone problems? @miketd has had a couple of suggestions. (says vindicated Nokia user 🙂 in reply to mawawa #
  • Really should go leaflethog, but it's -3 outside… #
  • Chesterfield canal ices over http://www.flickr.com/photos/intentional_accident/4200828580/ #
  • Wondering if lorries are less likely to skid than cars. Greater mass, more pressure on road, better adhesion? #
  • Collecting my amazon parcel has been a somewhat surreal experience. #
  • @tom_geraghty in that case, the lorry driver trying to get an HGV down our road must have been nuts! #
  • Really, @libdemvoice? The leader debates will be "Tleevised" you say? #
  • Not least because "City Link Derby" is actually in Ilkestone – which satnav spotted but I didn't. #
  • Give Pizza a Chance http://flic.kr/p/7pwFDs #

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Tweets on 2009-12-20

  • After a few months of no weddings, today we've got two today. Speculating on what brides wear when it's -2 outside. #
  • @NCCLols increase in cost is because of increase in frequency – now monthly and lots of inserts #
  • Oh dear – miscommunication. Ringers, priest, verger, choir expecting 1pm wedding; happy couple, guests expecting 2pm… #
  • No chance to go to Derby to collect undelivered Amazon parcel inbetween weddings 😦 #
  • At least with undelivered Royal Mail parcels, the depot is only a bus journey up the road. #
  • Ooh, thot plickening! Some guests have invites for 1.30pm. #
  • Ooh, bride perfectly on time. Good for her! #
  • Bride #2 has brought her own brass band – they're currently playing "See amid the winter's snow" #
  • @NCCLols the html is <strike>like this</strike>. If that helps. in reply to NCCLols #
  • @nghodder @lloydiejl do you know each other? You're both Nottm LD improvvers… #
  • Cor, they don't just have a brass band, they also have a string quartet for the signing of the registers. #
  • Doesn't make up for Bride #2 coming in T+15mins. #
  • @mithomas20 fingerless gloves are the answer! 🙂 in reply to mithomas20 #
  • This christmas is going to be a kitteny baublegedden. #
  • @RichardBooth you could easily add your own epaulettes? Won't people start calling you Captain Jack? in reply to RichardBooth #
  • People's suggestions of things to buy in for emergency festive dinner if we get snowed in (but that will keep a week if we don't) ? #
  • @willhowells there was a very similar joke in this year's @skymirror panto which lead to much corpsing from the younger principles. #
  • Two quiche recipes. Blind bake one and not the other. Onions caramelising. #
  • Poor #bbcr4 announcer (Caroline Brown?) sounds barely able to speak through flu – and has done since 10pm. #
  • This Channel Tunnel thing sounds pretty awful. #
  • Really helpful plugin for (wordpress) group bloggers and the forgetful – displays scheduled posts on writing window http://tr.im/I7bl #
  • Voilà! Une Quiche Lorraine et une tarte aux oignons d'Alscce. http://flic.kr/p/7oYGYF #
  • @jonnie_uk no in reply to jonnie_uk #
  • My new favourite font – Neutraface. http://tr.im/I7nR (youtube) (Don't know the song they're parodying. Don't need to!) #
  • Even more disorganised with Christmas cards this year than last year – last posting date is Monday! #
  • @CllrIainRoberts you don't often have to sit on a hot, dark plane for 15 hours with no food, water or information… in reply to CllrIainRoberts #
  • @helenduffett crisis plan going goto action? Hope your PR and operational teams are joined up 🙂 in reply to helenduffett #
  • @Alexander_Ball 100th tweet? Ah, bless. in reply to Alexander_Ball #

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Tweets on 2009-12-19

  • RT @libdemvoice: New post: Massive $6bn lawsuit for repeated breaches of music copyright http://ldv.org.uk/17209 #
  • "Worldwide, we spend $145bn on holiday gifts" says #bbcr4 's excellent More or Less. #
  • It's been a long day, but I am finally eating me tea and listening to a ginantonnix gently fizz. #
  • P is making me watch http://www.bbc.co.uk/victorianchristmas – which he is calling Victorian Blue Peter #
  • @ncclols We agree the arrow is too expensive http://tr.im/I48z #
  • The Port Demon broke into my house again last night and drank loads of my port and gave me a hangover 😦 #

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Tweets on 2009-12-18

  • Joining queue of people checking Twitter and collecting parcels from Royal Mail. #
  • Heh, many of same people in queue at next-door McD's #
  • The confusing world of womenswear – these scarves are £15… http://flic.kr/p/7ouk7T #
  • … But these very similar-looking scarves are £85! http://flic.kr/p/7oyfb1 #
  • Ooh, we're going to @skymirror's panto tonight, I nearly forgot! #
  • @lordbonkers thank goodness there's no unwanted levity from Market Harborough snow in reply to lordbonkers #
  • RT @timeshighered: BREAKING: Lib Dems to scrap tuition fees http://bit.ly/7fJ7Vl << "breaking" ?! #

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Tweets on 2009-12-17

  • Ouch. Planning ctte has taken over 2hrs to determine 4 apps. #
  • RT @FakeAPStylebook: Only use the word "proactive" if it will dynamically impact your synergistic throughput paradigm. #
  • @tonytheaker lath and plaster here too. Loft hatch was fine but heating work led to cave-in. #
  • Wondering if drug dealers get joint statements. #
  • @ramtops oh, well, next year, presumably, "Steve and family" won't know you've moved. in reply to ramtops #
  • Right, what next? Work, Peggle or return phone calls? #
  • @Thickfurred Heh, tis Peggle Nights Deluxe! in reply to Thickfurred #
  • Today I learned the Aster family is different from the Astor family. #
  • Wow, really good timing: been leaflethog in summer sun all morning, but just as we finished, sky turned black , and now it's snowing hard. #

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Daily View 2×2: 17 December 2009

Good morning, and welcome to Daily View. Today we’re wishing happy birthday to children’s author Jacqueline Wilson and commemorating the death of Dorothy L Sayers.

2 Must-Read Blog Posts

What are other Liberal Democrat bloggers saying? Here are two posts that have caught the eye from the Liberal Democrat Blogs aggregator:

Spotted any other great posts in the last day from blogs that aren’t on the aggregator? Do post up a comment sharing them with us all.

2 Big Stories

BA staff: we got it wrong over strike

The Independent is picking at the scab of industrial relations:

British Airways cabin crew facing the grim prospect of taking part in a highly unpopular 12-day strike over Christmas have begun questioning the tactics of their union leaders.

The planned stoppage is more drastic than anything they expected when they voted to take action against what they saw as high-handed behaviour by BA’s chief executive, Willie Walsh, and his management team.

Cancer treatment takes a giant step forward as scientists crack code

Better news from the Times

The complete genetic codes of two human cancers have been mapped for the first time. The move could herald a medical revolution in which every tumour can be targeted with personalised therapy.

Tweets on 2009-12-16

  • There's something about the phrase "dirty merf" that makes me snigger. #
  • Being told Nottingham has the best performing HWRC (="tip") in the country – over 90% of goods taken to Lenton Lane are recycled. #
  • @helenduffett MRF, pronounced merf, is Materials Recycling Facility, the place where they sort out the contents of recycling bins. in reply to helenduffett #
  • Rarely is the question asked, what is a dirty merf? http://bit.ly/4IhaGL #
  • MET OFFICE: ADVISORY of Heavy Snow for East Midlands valid from 0001 Thu 17 Dec to 2359 Fri 18 Dec <– woo! But when will I leaflet? #
  • Tonight, I have been ringing with a band made up of emergency service ringers. #
  • Blimey, the Notts Police Band are really really good. #

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