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52 Books project

At the start of 2011, I vowed to read 52 books throughout the year, and I also said I would write short review of each. Well, I read 52 books. Unfortunately, writing a review after every book became too much of a burden, so I stopped that partway through. Below is a list of the books I read.

#1 – Freedom by Jonathan Franzen

#2 – A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson

#3 – The Road by Cormac McCarthy

#4 – Hard Times by Charles Dickens

#5 – Game Change by John Heilemann and Mark Haplerin

#6 – Netherland by Joseph O’Neill

#7 – Cleopatra by Stacy Schiff

#8 – Franny and Zooey by J.D. Salinger

#9 – A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers

#10 – Naked Airport by Alistair Gordon

#11 – The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame

#12 – Obama’s Wars by Bob Woodward

#13 – The Russian Debutante’s Handbook by Gary Shteyngart

#14 – The Rector of Justin by Louis Auchincloss

#15 – The Making of a Royal Romance by Katie Nicholl

#16 – Flatland by Edwin A. Abbott

#17 – The Big Short by Michael Lewis

#18 – Absurdistan by Gary Shteyngart

#19 – The City After the Automobile by Moshe Safdie

#20 – The Catcher In The Rye by J.D. Salinger

#21 – Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh

#22 – Into Thin Air by John Krakauer

#23 – Points Unknown by David Roberts (editor)

#24 – Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman

#25 – Silent Spring by Rachel Carson

#26 – A Thousand Days by Arthur Schlesinger Jr.

#27 – In The Skin of a Lion by Michael Ondaadje

#28 – The Disappearing Spoon by Sam Kean

#29 – Parisians by Graham Robb

#30 – The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway

#31 – The Belly of Paris by Emile Zola

#32 – The Kill by Emile Zola

#33 – Rats by Robert Sullivan

#34 – Barbarians at the Gate by Bryan Burroughs and John Helyar

#35 – The U.S. vs al Qaeda – Foreign Affairs by Gideon Rose (editor)

#36 – Caviar by Inga Saffron

#37 – Transforming Paris – The Life And Labors of Baron Haussmann by David P. Jordan

#38 – A Matter Of Principle by Conrad Black

#39 – The Astonishing General: The Life and Legacy of Sir Isaac Brock by Wesley B. Turner

#40 –  The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde

#41 - Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut

#42 - Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad

#43 - Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson

#44 - The Gun by C. J. Chivers

#45 – The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Euenides

#46 - From Those Wonderful Folks Who Gave You Pearl Harbour by Jerry Della Femina

#47 – Super Sad True Love Story by Gary Shteyngart

#48 – A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

#49 – Man Seeks God by Eric Weiner

#50 – Extreme Money by Satyajit Das

#51 – Reveries of the Solitary Walker by Jean-Jacques Rousseau

#52 – Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carrol

Gritty Pretty City (18th)

Toronto waterfront.

Shooting details: a blend of three different exposures. Nikon D300s, 10-20mm, f8, 1/1600, 1/800 and 1/400, ISO200.

Lamb family Christmas 2011

Christmas morning.

Family, Christmas 2011

Family picture at my dad’s house on Christmas day.

Shooting details: Canon 7D on a tripod, remotely triggered. 27mm, f5.6, 1/125, ISO100. Two Nikon SB800 flashes mounted on stands with umbrellas.

Chiara’s Christmas Concert 2011

Gingerbread Cookies, Christmas 2011

For Whom the Road Tolls

I wrote the following story for cbc.ca on 8 December 2011.

A few days ago, Toronto Coun. John Parker made a comment about the proposal to increase user fees across the city for such things as skating and swimming — services that are currently free at many locations.

Parker said, “I can’t see that a $2 fee for anything is anything that should get anyone too riled up.”

Similarly, journalist Rob Granatstein, in an opinion piece in the Toronto Star, advocated new and increased user fees for city-run recreation programs. He wrote: “I’d bet the people in this city wouldn’t revolt if they were asked to pay a reasonable price for a good program they use.”

If Parker and Granatstein are correct that no one will complain about such fees, then never has a more convincing argument been made in favour of road tolls.

The City of Toronto is currently in a budget crisis that is threatening recreation programs, transit service and a wide range of other programs. The proposed cuts are the subject of public deputations this week at City Hall.

Mayor Rob Ford famously said Toronto doesn’t have a revenue problem, it has a spending problem. But most people who understand municipal government agree that revenue is indeed a major problem. Ford exacerbated it shortly after he got elected by eliminating the $60 per year vehicle registration tax.

Road tolls are one of the truly taboo subjects in Toronto. Politicians of all stripes run as far and as fast as they can to get away from the issue at all times.

During the 2003 mayoral campaign, candidate David Miller mused in a media scrum that if sufficient funding wasn’t forthcoming for public transit from the provincial and federal governments, then tolls would have to be considered as an option. His main rival at the time, John Tory, immediately pounced. Within hours, Tory’s campaign had designed a website (which never went live), called “The Toll Ranger,” depicting Miller as a bandit who essentially robs drivers of their hard-earned money.

The next day, Miller “clarified” his position, saying it was his preference that Toronto not have to resort to tolls. In the subsequent seven years of Miller’s mayoralty, he consistently said he would not introduce tolls, and generally refused to answer any further questions on the issue. He had learned his lesson on the campaign trail: road tolls are political suicide.

And yet, the opposition to road tolls — especially among conservatives — is somewhat bewildering. Nothing is more capitalist than road tolls. The principle is dead simple. You should pay for what you use. And the more you use it, the more you should pay.

Many drivers argue they already pay for roads through their taxes. And that’s true. Toronto taxpayers contributed $173 million dollars to the roads budget in 2011. Drivers also pay federal gas taxes every time they fill up. Toronto City Hall gets about $160 million from that every year (all of which goes to the TTC). But the argument also holds for public transit users. They paid $412 million to the TTC in taxes last year. The difference is that those same taxpayers must also pay a user fee (a fare) each time they want to use the TTC. Use the roads, pay once. Use public transit, pay twice.

So using the logic of those opposed to tolls, the TTC should eliminate all fares. We use taxes to pay the full cost of roads. To be consistent, we should also use taxes to pay the full cost of public transit.

If you agree it would be crazy to eliminate public transit fares, they you should also agree it is equally crazy that it costs nothing each time you want to use the road.

Another frequent argument against road tolls is that drivers have no way to avoid the fee. Recreation programs are optional. No one forces you to go skating or use the library, so if they cost money and you want to avoid the fee, just don’t use them. But you can’t decide not to go to work. And many, many people in the suburbs of Toronto and the GTA region have no way to get to work other than drive.

But this is also true of many public transit users, for whom it is the only viable way to get from A to B. And they must pay the fare every time they use it. If they were to argue public transit should be free because it’s their only option, they would be laughed out of the room.

It is time for Toronto to have a serious discussion about charging user fees for roads. It’s never really happened. The issues are complex. Toll only the highways, or major arteries as well? Congestion charge or not? Do it across the whole GTA or just in the City of Toronto? These are tough questions to answer. But the principle that those who use the roads should pay when they use them is an easy one, especially for those who believe in capitalism.

To continue with the current policy is, well, socialism. I’m not here to argue whether socialism is good or bad. But we must acknowledge what is in front of our noses. When you get the entire population to pay for a service that is then made available to everyone free of charge — regardless of ability to pay or how often you use it — that’s socialist.

It’s what our health-care system is, and so we call it socialized medicine. It is now time for this city to decide whether it wants to continue with a policy of socialized roads, or do something different.

Christmas Windows at The Bay

The Christmas scenes in the windows of The Bay on Queen Street.

Gritty Pretty City (17th)

Skating at Nathan Phillips Square. Shooting details: Nikon D300s, 50mm, f2, 1/20, +0.33 EV, ISO1600, handheld.

Gritty Pretty City (16th)

The Toronto skyline on 3 December 2011.

Shooting details: Nikon D300s, 20mm, f16, 8sec, -0.67 EV, ISO100, tripod.

Gritty Pretty City (15th)

I was in London back in April to help cover the royal wedding for CBC News. I had largely forgotten about the pictures I took until I stumbled across them the other day while looking for something else. Our broadcast position gave us a great view of Westminster Abbey and the surrounding area – a bird’s eye view of this part of London that few get to experience. It was startling to be able to look at the clock on Big Ben at eye level, and to see the intricate detail on the abbey.

Gritty Pretty City (14th)

The Royal York Hotel.

Shooting Details: Nikon D300s, 13mm, f8, 1/500, ISO200. Fake tilt shift effect in Photoshop.

The Solution to Suburban Traffic Congestion

I wrote this story for the CBC News series, “The Big Fix”, about the infrastructure problems facing Canada today. It appeared on the CBC News website on 22 November 2011.

It hardly matters where you live, everyone’s got their own traffic congestion horror story these days. It’s a new go-to topic of conversation for Canadians that can even trump the weather. Worsening traffic problems are steadily choking our communities, and a consensus is building that rather than more highways, what the suburbs need is better public transit.

“Years ago I used to leave and there was no traffic. Now, it can be a coin toss,” says Doug Burley, a firefighter from Barrie, Ont., who has been doing the same commute for 25 years. When he started doing the daily drive, the trip each way was well under an hour. These days, it’s much longer. “It’s about an hour and 10 minutes at any given time,” he says. “Snow or whatever adds to that by as much as a half hour to an hour. That’s each way. It’s a long, hectic drive.”

The alarming part of Burley’s story is that he isn’t complaining about traffic in downtown Toronto. He faces clogged roads entirely within the suburbs, almost from the moment he pulls out of his driveway on his commute to Brampton, north-west of Toronto.

And Burley’s story is, sadly, far from unusual. In the Greater Toronto Area, Greater Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Montreal and other cities, congestion is spread over enormous areas. “Congestion’s quite significant in greater Vancouver,” says Robert Paddon, who’s with Translink, Vancouver’s transit authority. “In fact, there’s less congestion downtown than in the suburban areas.”

The reason is fairly simple. The car is the only way to get from A to B for the majority of people in this country.

“The problem is we don’t yet offer a realistic alternative to people,” says Jeff Lehman, the mayor of Barrie. “I don’t actually have any illusions about fundamentally changing the pattern of travel. We are a car-based society and it’s a city that has a car-based urban form. And we, the collective we, have done a miserable job of adjusting our public transit system to serve the new land use pattern of employment.”

What Lehman is referring to is the movement not just of people, but of jobs to the suburbs over the past 20 years, particularly office jobs. That, combined with immigration and the lower cost of housing compared to downtown areas, has resulted in explosive growth in Canada’s suburbs. In that time, little public transit has been built. Almost none was created to get people from suburban houses to suburban jobs.

“In the last 20 years it’s absolutely pathetic, the amount of transit that’s been built in this city and in this region,” says Paul Bedford, who’s on the board of Metrolinx, the Ontario government agency in charge of transit planning.

So roads and highways are jammed, and there’s no quick fix.

“The level of congestion and auto traffic in those areas is going to get way worse before it gets better,” according to Michael Roschlau, the head of the Canadian Urban Transit Association. “In the short term, the next five or 10 years, there’s going to be an increasing number of cars on that limited lane capacity in suburban areas before we can start making the quantum leap.”

When he says quantum leap, Roschlau is referring to the move by large numbers of commuters to public transit. Even if governments decided to start building huge integrated public transit networks tomorrow, and even if they had all the money necessary to fund them — big ifs — they would take decades to build.

The Greater Toronto Area and Greater Vancouver both have such plans in the works. The Toronto region’s, called the Big Move, would eventually make it possible for a person to commute from suburb to suburb or to downtown Toronto by rail or bus, paying a single fare and getting to their destination about as fast as if they had driven. Vancouver’s plan, Transport 2040, has similar goals.

This is what you might call the “big fix” to suburban traffic congestion.

However, the cost of all this is daunting. The Big Move has an estimated price tag of $50 billion over the next 25 years or so, $80 billion if operating and maintenance costs are included. In Vancouver, the cost would be far less, but it’s still in the billions.

It’s easy for governments and voters to say no to such a huge public expenditure, which would almost certainly come with some combination of road tolls, municipal sales taxes and parking levies. But the argument now being put forward is that we can’t afford to say no. The Greater Toronto region is expecting another 2.5 million people over the next 20 years, for example.

“How the hell does it work every day?” says Bedford. “The only way a 10-million-person region works successfully is through a massive public transit network, which we don’t have right now.” Vancouver’s situation is similar. The region is expecting another million people by 2040.

“If you don’t do anything about that, with that growth, the danger is you will go backwards in terms of GDP and the economy,” says George Hazel, an expert on cities who is hired by municipalities around the world to give them advice on how to build better transportation networks. He did a study for Siemens that ranks global cities on how at-risk they are of economic decline. “Some of the Canadian cities are in there, including Toronto. Dubai is there as well. Dubai is a city that tried to work mobility just on the private car. What are they doing? They’re retrofitting transit, because they found out it didn’t work.”

The cost of congestion in Canada is already estimated in the billions of dollars per year. If nothing is done to build more public transit, the predictions get even darker.

Eric Miller, head of the Cities Centre at the University of Toronto, says people will stop moving to the region altogether. “It’s not a happy future,” says Miller. “It literally is almost a life-and-death thing for the city. Transportation is so fundamental that we will not continue to prosper unless our transportation system is significantly improved. Eventually, people will stop coming here to live. Jobs will move away because it simply will not be an attractive enough place.”

For now, the millions of people who do live in Canada’s suburbs have no escape from the congestion. Even if the promised integrated regional transit networks become a reality, it will take decades to build them. The big fix is a long way off.

Ready for winter

I’ve been saying for months that only insane people ride bikes in the winter. I’ve tried it and it is trecherous. Until now, I’ve never understood how people stay upright. For me, hitting ice on a bike has often rather quickly resulted in me hitting the deck hard.

Then I heard about studded tires for bikes. It was hard to believe they exist, but they do and the reviews I looked at are effusive. Everyone says they’re great. They bite into snow and ice, and allow you to commute on city streets or ride on trails in winter with confidence.

I started commuting to work on my bike back in March, as soon as there was no snow. And for a while now, I’ve been dreading the time when I can’t do it anymore. I love commuting this way. It’s cheap and it’s fast. Because I work so early in the morning (middle of the night, really), the only other way I could get to work is by taxi. Going home, I could use the TTC, but with all the cuts to service coming, I’m not sure I want to subject myself to the indignity of waiting forever for a streetcar that, when it shows up, is already jammed full. I decided I’d far rather subject myself to the indignity of riding to work in winter conditions.

I bought the studded tires today at Duke’s Cycle in Toronto. The guys there had the same opinion of these tires as I had read online. They work. They allow you to ride a bike in places and in weather conditions you didn’t think was possible.

This afternoon I put them on my cyclocross bike (there’s no way they would have fit on the fixie, which is a track frame and has only enough clearance for road racing tires). On a test ride around the neighbourhood (no snow yet, of course), I found them to be heavy, sluggish and really really loud. But I’ll take it if it keeps me upright through ice patches and snow.

I’m still convinced that anyone who rides their bike in the winter is insane. It’s just that I’m now coming around to the view that the other options I have for getting to and from work are even more insane.

Fall morning in the backyard

Incheon

Incheon Airport, South Korea. March 2011.

Shooting details: Nikon D300s, 10mm, f4, 1/30, ISO200.

Gritty Pretty City (13th)

My bike. Shooting details: Nikon D300s, 10mm, f9, 1/160, ISO200.

Rob Ford, mayor of Halloween

As seen at the Sorauren Park pumpkin parade, 1 November 2011.

John’s new ride

My friend John’s new truck. It’s a Ford pickup from the 1940s.

Stars and fire

We arrived at a cottage on Lake Saint Peter on a Friday night in the pouring rain, with the forecast for more rain all weekend. I had put the tripod in the car before we left, just in case. By Saturday afternoon, the clouds had cleared out and by nightfall, the stars were out and the fires were burning.

Note: the cloudlike image you see in the sky above the fire is not smoke, but the Milky Way.

Shooting details: Nikon D300s, 10mm, f5, tripod, shutter open for about 31 minutes.