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Gold/Mining/Energy : Strictly: Drilling and oil-field services

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To: kodiak_bull who wrote (84890)1/21/2001 7:11:22 PM
From: Zeuspaul  Read Replies (1) of 95453
 
We used to have garbagemen on the city and county payrolls. Centralized picking up of the trash. Not any more (except in large, inefficient cities like Philly--guess what, a strike comes along and phew! governor! it gets pretty ripe, pretty quick)--we've got contract trash collection with different rates for different sized trash barrels and frequency (I'm a relatively small 16 gallon barrel myself, once a week).

A bit far from drilling..but we're friends and its Sunday..

I used to live in Long Beach ( Big City) and the they had different size containers and different prices. They always picked up the trash and I never heard a complaint...Long Beach has its own trash collectors.

Now I live in a smaller city..one price for everything and if something is too heavy or not the right size they complain. These are contract trash collectors.

There is no guarantee that a private outfit provides better service at a lower price. It is currently a politically correct position but it simply isn't true.

After the transfer of power takes place from the public entity to the private entity the private guys can take advantage of the system just as well as the public ones and often do.

If you want to see it in action...when a private outfit moves from a bid situation to a time and materials situation the manpower required to do a job increases dramatically.

As far as the public schools go...if you aren't part of the solution you are part of the problem<g>

The whole reason to deregulate (not "dumb-regulate" a la California) is to spread out the costs efficiently, as only a relatively free market can. Where we run into problems, no surprise, is when politicians get involved.

Agreed on the politicians but you can't ignore them because they are real and they ain't going away.

There is no free market for energy. How much energy is sold on the spot market? How much through long term contracts? Is nuclear power sold on the free market? Is the Hoover dam juice sold on the free market? Can I buy power from Pennsylvania?

How are costs spread out efficiently when one US citizen pays 50 cents per kWh and another pays 10 cents? We share the same country..the same federal government. It was the feds that started this with their deregulation schemes and now they expect the little guy to pay for their misguidance or lack there of because an incompetent state government and some deregulated utilities made some bad decisions. The feds can't start the ball rolling and then wash their hands when the sh*t hits the fan.

It is like bait and switch advertising.

If you want free market get rid of all the long term contracts and let everyone bid for the juice.

Zeuspaul
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