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Hit! Magazine - Marilyn Reelhorn ( November / December 1952) .... Too many 'useless layers' of local government -- 'a stress-free career' (July 27, 2012) ...
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Image by marsmet463
I wish my dad hadn’t told me only lazy people work for the government because I would be rich and retired by now and have had a stress-free career.

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.....item 1).... Florida Today ... www.floridatoday.com ... Letter: Too many 'useless layers' of local government
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img code photo ... Letters To The Editor

cmsimg.floridatoday.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=A9&...

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Written by
John Engel
Titusville

FILED UNDER
Opinion

4:43 PM, Jul 27, 2012

www.floridatoday.com/article/20120729/OPINION/120726011/L...|newswell|text|Home|s


Thursday’s article, “Audit follows firing of Titusville EMS chief,” is just more proof in a long line of proof of how many unnecessary and useless layers of local government administration we’ve had forced upon us.

Titusville is a city of 45,000, so why would they even need an EMS/Training chief? The guy who was fired had a cushy, high-paying job and he still was either too lazy or incompetent to perform the few duties he had.

It makes us private citizens wonder how many of these type of people are hiding in our quagmire of local government and why we should be allowing them to collectively bargain against us and walk away with 60 percent of their salary as a pension.

I wish my dad hadn’t told me only lazy people work for the government because I would be rich and retired by now and have had a stress-free career.
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Philadelphia - Old City: Franklin Court - B. Free Franklin Post Office
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Image by wallyg
Franklin Court cuts through an entire city block on the former site of Benjamin Franklin's home at 316-322 Market Street. Although razed in 1812, a "Ghost House" frame, built by Robert Venturi in 1976 for the Bicentennial, depicts the exact positions of the original 3-story house, 33 square-foot, ten-room house and adjacent print shop, while excavations underneath reveal the original foundations, privy pits, and wells.

Six museums on the site, also built in 1976 for the Bicentennial, trace Franklin's life as a publisher, politician, postmaster, printer and invebtor. Below the court is an underground museum filled with paintings, objects, and inventions associated with Benjamin Franklin including a reproduction of Franklin's Armonica, also called a glass harmonica.

At 314 Market Street is the United States Postal Service Museum, with exhibits that include Pony Express pouches and originals of Franklin's Pennyslvania Gazette. At 316 Market Street is the B. Free Franklin Post Office, the the only active post office in the United States that does not fly a United States flag--because there wasn't yet one in 1775. At 318 Market Street is an architectural exhibit about Franklin's interest in fire-resistant buildings with fully exposed walls, revealing wooden joists separated by masonry and plaster. In the cellar are collections of pottery and glassware, collected from his privy pits. At 320 Market Street is the Printing Office and Bindery, with demonstrations of 18th century printing and binding equipment on display. At 322 Market Street is the General Advertiser, a the restored office of The Aurora and general Advertiser, the newspaper published by Franklin's grandson, Benjamin Franklin Bache. 322 Market Street also claims two famous connections--James Wilson, an editor of The Aurora, and grandfather to Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, who lived there; and Sarah Josepha Hale, editor of Godey's Lady's Book and author of "Mary Had a Little Lamb," who worked there from 1837-1877.


Our three Facebook editors for the day: ioleta Petrova Georgieva, Tanja Poša and Cristian Carp
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Image by European Parliament
This photo is copyright free, but must be credited: "© European Union 2012 - European Parliament". (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs Creative Commons license). For HR files please contact: webcom-flickr(AT)europarl.europa.eu

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