Springlines
Anarchistic musings from the end stall on Float 'A'
By Ed Sasser boldeagle@boatbuilding.com
Multi-tasking?
Bureaucrats
Eddys Chuck,* Alaska:
While
everyone here wears multiple hats, the term multi-tasking is more or less a
big-city, mainland term. Oh,
I suppose I might tie a leader or two while the water in the crab pot boils.
I might cut a skiff seat while the epoxy on the clamped in-wale
cures. But, generally, our idea
of multi-tasking would be something along the lines of fishing and drinking
beer at the same time.
We've
got a State capitol, though, where multi-tasking seems to be all the rage.
I'm not all that sure that it is really multi-tasking that is going
on there. It might just be the
symptoms of shortattentionspanitus. Hard to believe that a place so busy can
actually be part of Alaska. I had to go there to testify on a bill this session.
Funny process. Guess it's true that "folks who respect the law and love
the taste of sausage should never watch either being made."
One
of the laws we ended up with last year was a "boating safety" law
that is really more about boating registration. It's not a bad thing to have numbers on your boat; you might
even get it back if it is stolen. But
in the large scheme of things, government registration of a row or paddle
boat under 16 feet long doesn’t seem to be one of life's big priorities.
The only person in Eddy’s Chuck in favor of the law is Hubert.
But we don’t count him since he’s a retired multi-tasking
bureaucrat himself and can be counted upon to be the one-eyed deacon in the
Amen Corner for everything the government does.
(Belgo
was paddling his kayak up Freshwater Bay the other day. He had an Uzi, a
sawed-off 87P and a 9mm Glock in the bow of the boat. He saw a trooper boat up ahead and got a sudden chill because:
he didn't have registration numbers on his kayak.)
That's how it is here now.
One
of the multi-tasking bureaucrats I met in Juneau clearly was drawn to his
calling because he only had to focus on short-term emergencies.
He became argumentative when I told him he wasn’t really
multi-tasking but probably was suffering from ADHD (attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder). He was
curious enough to check out a web site on ADHD to see if he had the
symptoms. But when he got there
he was confronted by this neat graphic. He promptly downloaded it for his
fax coversheet and sent it to a lobbyist friend.
Never did get to double-click on the symptoms.
These
experiences in Juneau have served us well here at the end of the shortest
fjord between Ketchikan and Skagway. Each
time we get a visitor from the mainland who appears to be a multi-tasking
bureaucrat we easily move into distraction mode. That’s how we got Harriet buried at sea
and how we recently handled the SaniCan inspector.
“How
are you?” the inspector asked Stan at the floatplane dock.
“Oh,
my hypochondria is in remission but I’ve been told to stay on my placebos
for another two weeks just to be sure,” was his cryptic response.
Once
the multi-tasking bureaucrat is off balance, the rest of the team moves in.
“I’m
looking for the village council president to see if you have installed
portable toilets as required by law,” the M-T B declared.
“Of
course,” said Stan. “That
would be Abba the Palindrome. He’s up at the Laundromat.”
“Abba?”
the M-T B queries.
“Yes,”
Belgo takes over, “we call him that because he goes either way.”
“Any
Palindrome is a Pal-o-mine,” chimes in Eldridge as he stacks crab pots on
the dock six high, blocking the M-T B’s escape from the work float that
joins the floatplane dock to the main float.
“Yes,
but…about the portable toilets”.
Bob
Birch, owner of BobAir plays his card:
“Weather is closing in back in Juneau, sir. If you want to stay the night, I can get you in the
morning…”
“No,
I’ll leave with you, I just need to be assured that a portable toilet has
been installed and inspect it for compliance.”
We
all point. There it is on the
corner of Main Float and Float A.
Satisfied,
he returns to the aging Skywagon and leaves for Juneau.
We all high-five each other for a new personal best:
this M-T B never even touched land.
Time for some Eddy’s Chuck style multi-tasking.
One
of these days we may actually have a SaniCan that, when you look into the
hole, you don’t see the bay below. Thing
is, it seems to work fine the way it is now as long as folks follow the
directions on the sign: “Prior to using, check below for kayakers.”
(*Eddys Chuck, Alaska is a fictitious place populated
by real Alaskan Noodlers.)
Copyright © 1999-2000 by Ed Sasser. All rights reserved. |