Thursday, February 24, 2011

Does a cat's purr hold holistic powers? – Telegraph Blogs

Pete Wedderburn

Pete Wedderburn qualified as a vet twenty-five years ago, and now spends half his working life writing newspaper columns. He lives in Ireland with his wife, two daughters and a menagerie of dogs, cats, poultry and other furry and feathered companions. Pete answers readers' queries about their pets' health in his video Q&A – he is also on Twitter as @petethevet and has a Facebook Fan Page.

Does a cat's purr hold holistic powers?

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There’s something almost mystical about the purr of a cat. It’s a sound that’s easy on the ear, and cats seem to use it when they’re feeling goodwill towards humans. There’s not much to dislike about a cat’s purr.

Except, of course, when it’s the loudest purr in the world.  Smokey, a twelve year old cat from Northhampton, is the world record holder, with a purr as loud as a lawnmower. He has to be put out of the room if people are on the telephone, and he even drowns out the sound of the radio and television.

Even normal cats’ purrs can be annoying for vets. If you’re trying to listen for subtle abnormalities in the sounds of a cat’s heart and lungs with a stethoscope, a purr can make it impossible. There’s a trick used in veterinary consulting rooms to “switch off” a purr: if a tap in the sink is turned on, most cats stop purring for a few minutes while looking at and listening to the water.

It’s easy to assume that a purring cat is a happy cat, but it’s not quite so simple. In her latest book, The Secret Life of Your Cat, feline behaviourist Vicky Halls explains that a cat’s purr is not just about contentment. She says that a purr happens when “positive social interaction is taking place or desired”. I’ve also heard it described as happening when a cat has a friend or needs a friend. Cats purr in all sorts of situations. The classical example may be a contented cat curled up on your lap, but I’ve seen cats purring even when they’re in pain.

Which brings me back to that mystical side of a cat’s purr: it’s been suggested that one of the function of the purr is to enable natural healing of the cat’s own body. Cats purr during both inhalation and exhalation with a consistent pattern and frequency between 25 and 150 Hertz. Various investigators have suggested that sound frequencies in this range can improve bone density and promote healing. This has been of interest in “holistic healing” circles but although it has not yet become widely accepted, it suggests that there may be potential for Smokey to get out there to earn his own keep. “Purr therapy”, only £50 a session, anyone?

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Friday, February 18, 2011

US Patent 6506148 – Nervous system manipulation by electromagnetic fields from monitors « Speak Truth 2 Power

US Patent 6506148 – Nervous system manipulation by electromagnetic fields from monitors

Barbara H. Peterson

Farm Wars

The TV and your computer monitor can be used to manipulate your nervous system. Here is the proof. Read it and weep:  

Nervous system manipulation by electromagnetic fields from monitors US Patent #6,506,148

“SUMMARY: Computer monitors and TV monitors can be made to emit weak low-frequency electromagnetic fields merely by pulsing the intensity of displayed images. Experiments have shown that the 1/2 Hz sensory resonance can be excited in this manner in a subject near the monitor. The 2.4 Hz sensory resonance can also be excited in this fashion. Hence, a TV monitor or computer monitor can be used to manipulate the nervous system of nearby people.”

“It is thus apparent that the human nervous system can be manipulated by screen emissions from subliminal TV image pulses.” LINK

The human nervous system controls everything from breathing and producing digestive enzymes, to memory and intelligence. (Human Nervous System)

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Isle prisons become key source of labor - Hawaii News - Staradvertiser.com

Isle prisons become key source of labor

Private and public groups hit hard by the recession are increasingly hiring less costly inmate workers

By Dan Nakaso

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Feb 14, 2011

The demand for prison work crews as cheap labor for nonprofit groups, schools, churches and state and city agencies has skyrocketed over the past two years in an economy that forced deep cuts, layoffs and a mounting backlog of repair and maintenance projects.


Prison officials can't keep up with the requests pouring in for inmates to clean, do heavy lifting and even scour Leeward Coast beaches for medical waste in the runoff from Waimanalo Gulch Landfill last month.


Since the economy fell apart in 2008, "there has been a vast increase in requests for the past two years," said Francis X. Sequeira, warden at Oahu Community Correctional Center, who oversees 12 prisoner "work lines." "We can only address a finite amount of requests," Sequeira said in an e-mail.


Prison officials do not track the number of requests from all islands for prison labor, but there has been a clear increase, said Michael Hoffman, institutions division administrator for the state Department of Public Safety.


The largest group comes from Oahu, where about 300 prisoners from OCCC, the Women's Community Correctional Center, Waiawa Correctional Facility and -- in rare cases -- Halawa Correctional Facility meet the qualifications to work outside.


Crews guarded by adult corrections officers fan out across Oahu every day, said Hoffman, who supervised work-line crews for the state Department of Public Safety in the 1980s and 1990s.


The Department of Public Safety pays inmates 25 cents an hour, and the agencies and organizations that request help provide lunch for each inmate.


OCCC inmate John Carvalho, 52, worked up a sweat last week weed-whacking and straightening out headstones at Kaahumanu Cemetery in Kapalama with other prisoners under the watch of corrections officer Richard "Bolo" Kahawai, who has been overseeing work lines for 34 years.


"I get to work outside and be in the community," Carvalho said. "It's way better than sitting in a cell 24/7, contemplating what you did to get there. Inside, you're just not going anywhere."


While most organizations only need to provide inmates and accompanying corrections officers with a bento lunch, members of Kaahumanu Church are so grateful for the twice-a-month labor that they always provide a huge spread, Kahawai said.


Carvalho especially relishes any compliment that church members offer to the prisoners.


"You get a chicken-skin, good feeling that what you did is appreciated and worth it," Carvalho said.


Kahawai's work line, along with others that help churches and other organizations, are considered a "freebie that DPS gives back to the community," said Deanna Espinas, program administrator for Hawaii Correctional Industries.


Hawaii Correctional Industries, however, is an arm of the Department of Public Safety that describes itself as a "self-supporting, for-profit, quasi-state agency" created in 1990 to provide "meaningful" work for inmates.


It has million-dollar contracts to provide prisoner labor -- also at 25 cents per hour -- while being able to procure goods for other agencies at much lower cost.


Like the increased demand for prisoner work lines, requests for Hawaii Correctional Industries contracts "are coming out of the walls," Espinas said. "I'm proud of it and it's exciting, but I don't know if I can realistically accept such requests at this time."


The state Department of Transportation pays Hawaii Correctional Industries $80,000 per month to hire five work lines -- each consisting of six to eight prisoners -- to work weekdays.


The prisoners primarily clean freeways, highways and state roads in town, the Windward side, Hauula, Pearl City and Wahiawa and occasionally clear debris from homeless encampments, said transportation spokesman Dan Meisenzahl.


The prisoners and adult corrections officers arrive with their own vans, weed whackers and other equipment, freeing up Transportation Department workers to conduct maintenance and emergency repairs.


"It's a lot cheaper, and we're very happy with the program," Meisenzahl said. "It's not as expensive as hiring someone. You're not paying medical or all those extra costs. It's great for the prisoners, it's great for us. It's a great deal."


While inmates have been caught over the years after escaping from work-line crews, Meisenzahl said the majority "are highly motivated" to do well.


The state Department of Education had concerns about prisoners working at elementary and middle-school campuses when it signed a $1.07 million contract in July 2009 with Hawaii Correctional Industries to replace playgrounds.


"We didn't want pedophiles or child molesters on campus, and they told me they don't let those prisoners out to work," said Monica Kaui Baron, Department of Education playground coordinator. "They explained that these guys and women are already in the community doing work, and they were considered low-risk. These inmates are the lowest level of security and on their way out, to be released soon."


The DOE had been overcharged for inferior-quality playground equipment when Kaui Baron discovered that Hawaii Correctional Industries had an exemption to procure bids for other state agencies at lower costs.


"They negotiate a lot better prices for us, which means we can double the size of the playgrounds," Kaui Baron said. "We were paying a lot of money for playgrounds, and the quality wasn't that good, in essence putting our kids at risk."


The $1 million spent by the department covered all equipment and labor for 12 new playgrounds on Oahu and the Big Island.


The prisoners built elementary school playgrounds while classes were in session, Kaui Baron said, but worked at middle schools during intersessions.


A subsequent $2.3 million contract signed last July with Hawaii Correctional Industries will provide 38 new playgrounds at 28 more elementary and middle schools. And a third, $2.6 million contract will mean 41 new playgrounds for 33 schools beginning this month.


Inmates who go out on work crews could have been imprisoned for violent crimes, said Hoffman of the Department of Public Safety. But they subsequently showed good behavior and completed programs that deemed them "cleared to participate in community custody programs," he said.


Once out in the public, prisoners are guarded at a ratio of 10 inmates per each adult corrections officer, Hoffman said. "The majority would be entering into the last stages of sentences and are getting very close to what we refer to as their 'tentative parole date.'"


City parks officials normally use prisoners to clean parks five days a week, city spokeswoman Louise Kim McCoy said.


"They cut grass, they weed-whack and perform other manual labor at various city parks, Monday through Friday," McCoy said. "The only expense is to provide a box lunch, a bento, for each inmate."


On Wednesday the state Senate Committees on Hawaiian Affairs and Public Safety, Government Operations and Military Affairs will consider a bill to create a program to have nonviolent prisoners restore historical sites selected by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, said Sen. Will Espero, Public Safety Committee chairman.


For the prisoners, Espero said, working on Hawaiian sites could get some inmates in touch with their cultural roots. "If nothing else," Espero said, "it gives them that invigorating feel of just being outdoors."

Requests for prisoner labor have increased among government and community agencies trying to make up for layoffs and furlough days. Andrew Shippy, above, an inmate at Oahu Community Correctional Center, repositions flowers on a grave at Kaahumanu Cemetery after cutting the grass.
Inmates clear rubbish and weeds from the cemetery.

More Photos


The demand for prison work crews as cheap labor for nonprofit groups, schools, churches and state and city agencies has skyrocketed over the past two years in an economy that forced deep cuts, layoffs and a mounting backlog of repair and maintenance projects.

Prison officials can't keep up with the requests pouring in for inmates to clean, do heavy lifting and even scour Leeward Coast beaches for medical waste in the runoff from Waimanalo Gulch Landfill last month.

Since the economy fell apart in 2008, "there has been a vast increase in requests for the past two years," said Francis X. Sequeira, warden at Oahu Community Correctional Center, who oversees 12 prisoner "work lines." "We can only address a finite amount of requests," Sequeira said in an e-mail.

Prison officials do not track the number of requests from all islands for prison labor, but there has been a clear increase, said Michael Hoffman, institutions division administrator for the state Department of Public Safety.

The largest group comes from Oahu, where about 300 prisoners from OCCC, the Women's Community Correctional Center, Waiawa Correctional Facility and -- in rare cases -- Halawa Correctional Facility meet the qualifications to work outside.

Crews guarded by adult corrections officers fan out across Oahu every day, said Hoffman, who supervised work-line crews for the state Department of Public Safety in the 1980s and 1990s.

The Department of Public Safety pays inmates 25 cents an hour, and the agencies and organizations that request help provide lunch for each inmate.

OCCC inmate John Carvalho, 52, worked up a sweat last week weed-whacking and straightening out headstones at Kaahumanu Cemetery in Kapalama with other prisoners under the watch of corrections officer Richard "Bolo" Kahawai, who has been overseeing work lines for 34 years.

"I get to work outside and be in the community," Carvalho said. "It's way better than sitting in a cell 24/7, contemplating what you did to get there. Inside, you're just not going anywhere."

While most organizations only need to provide inmates and accompanying corrections officers with a bento lunch, members of Kaahumanu Church are so grateful for the twice-a-month labor that they always provide a huge spread, Kahawai said.

Carvalho especially relishes any compliment that church members offer to the prisoners.

"You get a chicken-skin, good feeling that what you did is appreciated and worth it," Carvalho said.

Kahawai's work line, along with others that help churches and other organizations, are considered a "freebie that DPS gives back to the community," said Deanna Espinas, program administrator for Hawaii Correctional Industries.

Hawaii Correctional Industries, however, is an arm of the Department of Public Safety that describes itself as a "self-supporting, for-profit, quasi-state agency" created in 1990 to provide "meaningful" work for inmates.

It has million-dollar contracts to provide prisoner labor -- also at 25 cents per hour -- while being able to procure goods for other agencies at much lower cost.

Like the increased demand for prisoner work lines, requests for Hawaii Correctional Industries contracts "are coming out of the walls," Espinas said. "I'm proud of it and it's exciting, but I don't know if I can realistically accept such requests at this time."

The state Department of Transportation pays Hawaii Correctional Industries $80,000 per month to hire five work lines -- each consisting of six to eight prisoners -- to work weekdays.

The prisoners primarily clean freeways, highways and state roads in town, the Windward side, Hauula, Pearl City and Wahiawa and occasionally clear debris from homeless encampments, said transportation spokesman Dan Meisenzahl.

The prisoners and adult corrections officers arrive with their own vans, weed whackers and other equipment, freeing up Transportation Department workers to conduct maintenance and emergency repairs.

"It's a lot cheaper, and we're very happy with the program," Meisenzahl said. "It's not as expensive as hiring someone. You're not paying medical or all those extra costs. It's great for the prisoners, it's great for us. It's a great deal."

While inmates have been caught over the years after escaping from work-line crews, Meisenzahl said the majority "are highly motivated" to do well.

The state Department of Education had concerns about prisoners working at elementary and middle-school campuses when it signed a $1.07 million contract in July 2009 with Hawaii Correctional Industries to replace playgrounds.

"We didn't want pedophiles or child molesters on campus, and they told me they don't let those prisoners out to work," said Monica Kaui Baron, Department of Education playground coordinator. "They explained that these guys and women are already in the community doing work, and they were considered low-risk. These inmates are the lowest level of security and on their way out, to be released soon."

The DOE had been overcharged for inferior-quality playground equipment when Kaui Baron discovered that Hawaii Correctional Industries had an exemption to procure bids for other state agencies at lower costs.

"They negotiate a lot better prices for us, which means we can double the size of the playgrounds," Kaui Baron said. "We were paying a lot of money for playgrounds, and the quality wasn't that good, in essence putting our kids at risk."

The $1 million spent by the department covered all equipment and labor for 12 new playgrounds on Oahu and the Big Island.

The prisoners built elementary school playgrounds while classes were in session, Kaui Baron said, but worked at middle schools during intersessions.

A subsequent $2.3 million contract signed last July with Hawaii Correctional Industries will provide 38 new playgrounds at 28 more elementary and middle schools. And a third, $2.6 million contract will mean 41 new playgrounds for 33 schools beginning this month.

Inmates who go out on work crews could have been imprisoned for violent crimes, said Hoffman of the Department of Public Safety. But they subsequently showed good behavior and completed programs that deemed them "cleared to participate in community custody programs," he said.

Once out in the public, prisoners are guarded at a ratio of 10 inmates per each adult corrections officer, Hoffman said. "The majority would be entering into the last stages of sentences and are getting very close to what we refer to as their 'tentative parole date.'"

City parks officials normally use prisoners to clean parks five days a week, city spokeswoman Louise Kim McCoy said.

"They cut grass, they weed-whack and perform other manual labor at various city parks, Monday through Friday," McCoy said. "The only expense is to provide a box lunch, a bento, for each inmate."

On Wednesday the state Senate Committees on Hawaiian Affairs and Public Safety, Government Operations and Military Affairs will consider a bill to create a program to have nonviolent prisoners restore historical sites selected by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, said Sen. Will Espero, Public Safety Committee chairman.

For the prisoners, Espero said, working on Hawaiian sites could get some inmates in touch with their cultural roots. "If nothing else," Espero said, "it gives them that invigorating feel of just being outdoors."

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Thursday, February 10, 2011

NYSE Euronext and Deutsche Börse in Merger Talks - NYTimes.com

German Börse in Talks to Buy the Big Board

Traders at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in Germany, whose owner is negotiating to purchase the New York Stock Exchange.Marius Becker/DPA, via Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesTraders at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in Germany, whose owner is negotiating to purchase the New York Stock Exchange.

9:00 p.m. | Updated

The New York Stock Exchange, a symbol of American capitalism for more than two centuries, may soon have new owners — in Europe.

The exchange, facing pressure from electronic upstarts that have taken business away from it, said on Wednesday that it was in advanced talks on a merger with the operator of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. A deal would create the world’s largest financial market, with a presence in 14 European countries as well as the United States.

A merger would potentially let customers trade stocks in New York, options tied to those shares in Paris and derivatives linked to them in Frankfurt.

A combination, after the mergers of other exchanges, would be another illustration of how globalization and technology have changed marketplaces. The New York Stock Exchange is a giant among exchanges, yet in a world of around-the-clock trading and rapid-fire algorithmic programs, its significance to investors has diminished. Once known for chief executives who were prominent cheerleaders for the stock market, the exchange now has a more muted public presence.

While the ringing of the opening bell every morning and images of anxious or joyful workers on the trading floor represent the stock market to millions of people, increasingly trades are being executed by computers far from Wall Street, in places like Jersey City and Kansas City.

The Big Board has already undergone a radical transformation in just a few years: from a clubby nonprofit organization where brokers on the floor handled most trades to a profit-making multinational corporation engaged in largely electronic trading. Some 1,300 equities and options traders now work on the floor of the exchange, down from nearly 3,000 a decade ago. As a public company, its stock price has slumped 64 percent from a high in 2006.

So while news of the merger negotiations was the talk of Wall Street on Wednesday, some had already accepted that further change was needed.

“You probably need more consolidation,” said Barry Smith, 44, a financial technology executive, who sat drinking beer with two friends at Bobby Van’s Steakhouse and Grill across the street from the exchange.

Under the terms being negotiated, the New York Stock Exchange — which began in 1792 when brokers gathered beneath a buttonwood tree in Lower Manhattan to trade five securities of the new nation — would still have a headquarters in Manhattan. But the Deutsche Börse would own as much as 60 percent of the new company, which would be incorporated in the Netherlands.

If a deal is reached, it could still face several hurdles, including regulatory and political resistance. New York City leaders have been particularly vocal about maintaining the city’s status as the leading financial capital.

Competition among exchanges has grown more intense in recent years as investors seeking speed, lower costs and greater liquidity have flocked to electronic platforms that pay little heed to financial centers or tradition. Exchanges are under pressure to get bigger to cut costs and invest in technology that will allow them to host as many transactions as quickly as possible.

“There is a race toward exchanges becoming ever bigger,” said Elie Darwish, an analyst at Exane BNP Paribas in Paris. “This would give NYSE Euronext-Deutsche Börse an unchallengeable position.”

Much of the $411 million in expected cost savings from a combination of the New York Exchange and the Deutsch Börse is expected to come from combining the two companies’ technology systems and back-office operations. Fewer than 1,000 job cuts are expected, with less than 100 in New York, said a person briefed on the matter who spoke anonymously because he was not authorized to discuss it.

Still, a merger could raise l questions about the importance of the exchange to the vitality of the financial industry in New York. The role of the exchange’s professionals on the floor may become more limited as a result.

Michael Pagano, a professor at the Villanova School of Business, said those floor specialists could help during times of market stress like the “flash crash” of May. “They could become something like the Maytag repairman,” he said. “He doesn’t necessarily do anything all day, but he’s there when you need him.”

The joint statement by the two companies closely followed the announcement of an all-stock merger of the London Stock Exchange and the Toronto Stock Exchange.

While NYSE Euronext and Deutsche Börse confirmed that they were in “advanced discussions” about a deal, they cautioned that the talks might still fall apart. Deutsche Börse has a history of trying to merge with other exchanges, including the Big Board and the London Stock Exchange, without success.

Still, a merger could be announced as soon as the middle of next week, according to the person briefed on the matter. NYSE Euronext shareholders are expected to receive a roughly 10 percent premium to their shares, this person added.

The last six years have yielded several big exchange unions, including the Chicago Mercantile Exchange’s purchases of the Chicago Board of Trade and Nymex Holdings and the Singapore exchange’s proposed acquisition of the Australian Stock Exchange.

NYSE Euronext itself is the product of the New York Stock Exchange’s takeovers of Archipelago Holdings, which gave it an electronic trading platform, Euronext and the American Stock Exchange.

Wednesday’s announcements will probably put additional pressure on smaller players, like the Nasdaq stock market, to seek additional partners to keep up.

Deutsche Börse’s chief executive, Reto Francioni, would serve as chairman from Frankfurt. Duncan L. Niederauer, the chief executive of NYSE Euronext, would serve the same role for the combined company, whose name has not been determined. The names of the local markets, including the New York Stock Exchange, would remain, in part to try to mitigate political backlash.

NYSE Euronext and Deutsche Börse held merger talks twice before, in 2008 and 2009, before resuming discussions again late last year, according to the person briefed on the matter.

David Jolly and Colin Moynihan contributed reporting.

Top Exchange Mergers and Acquisitions Since 2000

Date      Target Name Target Nation Acquiror Name Acquiror Nation Value ($mil)
Oct. 17, 2006 CBOT Holdings U.S. Chicago Mercantile Exchange U.S. 11,065
Mar. 27, 2008 Bovespa Holding Brazil BM&F Brazil 10,309
May 22, 2006 Euronext Netherlands NYSE Group U.S. 10,203
Oct. 25, 2010 ASX Ltd. Australia Singapore Exchange Singapore 8,305
Jan. 28, 2008 NYMEX Holdings U.S. CME Group U.S. 7,555
May 25, 2007 OMX AB Sweden Nasdaq Stock Market U.S. 4,109
Aug. 17, 2007 OMX AB Sweden DIFC United Arab Emirates 3,397
Feb. 9, 2011 TMX Group Canada London Stock Exchange Group United Kingdom 2,976
Apr. 30, 2007 International Securities Exchange Holdings U.S. Eurex Germany 2,821
Apr. 20, 2005 New York Stock Exchange U.S. Archipelago Holdings U.S. 2,259
Source: Thomson Reuters

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Diet soda may be tied to heightened risk of stroke, study claims | Herald Sun

Diet soda may be tied to heightened risk of stroke, study claims

DIET soda drinkers are probably doing their waistlines a favor, but may also be boosting their risk of having a stroke, according to research released by researchers from the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.

The study monitored the health of more than 2500 patients over nearly a decade.

They answered lengthy questionnaires about nutrition along the way and were monitored for several conditions.

In the time they were under evaluation, 559 of the test subjects experienced vascular events, including strokes caused by hemorrhage and those caused by clots.

Controlling for several factors, including age, smoking and alcohol intake, those who drank diet soda daily were 61 percent more likely than the rest to experience a stroke.

Even when taking into account people with existing vascular disease, the link still held. Study authors did not find any connection between regular soda and strokes.

Soft drinks of any kind, diet or sugary, are linked to several health problems.

People who drink one can of soda a day are more likely to have several risk factors for diabetes and cardiovascular disease including high blood pressure, elevated triglycerides, and high fasting blood sugar levels.

While the link is strong between diet soda and stroke risk, it does not prove cause and effect.

Study authors said further research should be done on the subject.

Stroke is the third leading cause of death in the US behind heart disease and cancer.

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Monday, February 7, 2011

Aldermen ready to pull plug on fluoride | Calgary & Alberta | News | Calgary Sun

Aldermen ready to pull plug on fluoride

Last Updated: February 6, 2011 4:55pm

Half of Calgary’s aldermen say support for a fluoride-treated water supply has dried up and its fate shouldn’t be decided in a public vote.

Ald. John Mar, along with several other council members polled by the Sun ahead of Monday’s meeting where fluoride will be debated, are ready to pull the plug on Mayor Naheed Nenshi’s suggestion the matter might be better left in the hands of Calgarians through a plebiscite.

“I think water fluoridation has seen its day,” said Ald. John Mar, one of several staunch supporters of a city committee’s recommendation to flush fluoride once and for all.

Ald. Jim Stevenson, another staunch opponent of water fluoridation, said a plebiscite leaves the fate of all in the hands of a few.

“I don’t think 53% of the 30% who vote should be able to force a medication on a 100% of the people of the city,” he said.

“It’s not the right way to decide mass medication.”

His words were echoed by aldermen Brian Pincott, Shane Keating and Gian-Carlo Carra, Druh Farrell and Andre Chabot.

Chabot said he fails to see the value a pricey plebiscite would bring to the discussion, which was recently addressed during a day-long public forum.

“It comes down to me, for fluoride, a moral issue — something that touches everyone,” he said.

“If everyone is not in agreement, it should not be forced on the population.”

The debate over water fluoridation has raged for years with staunch supporters on both sides.

Nenshi, who suggested a plebiscite may be the way to go when he met with the Sun’s editorial board, said he would prefer to engage the public on an issue over which many people have raised serious ethical concerns despite being backed by health officials and Alberta Health Services as a way to curb tooth decay.

Ald. Gord Lowe was one of the few aldermen contacted Sunday who agreed with the mayor.

“It came in with a plebiscite, it should go out with a plebiscite,” he said.

Aldermen Dale Hodges and Ray Jones also said they would vote in favour of such a motion if raised.

At least two aldermen, Gael MacLeod and Peter Demong, were undecided on how they would vote if presented with a plebiscite option.

Calgarians have been drinking fluoridated water since it was first brought in by plebiscite in 1989, a decision upheld by a second public vote in 1998.

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Japanese Company Invents Water Fueled Car