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Torq Resources Inc V.TORQ

Alternate Symbol(s):  TRBMF

Torq Resources Inc. is a Canada-based copper and gold exploration company with a portfolio of holdings in Chile. Its projects include Santa Cecilia, Margarita and Andrea. The Santa Cecilia project is located approximately 100 kilometers (km) east of the city of Copiapo, Chile, in the southern region of the Maricunga belt and immediately north of the El Indio belt. The property covers over 3,250 hectares (ha) and is immediately adjacent to the Norte Abierto project. The Margarita Iron-Oxide-Copper-Gold (IOCG) project is situated in Chile, over 65 km north of the city of Copiapo. The Margarita project is comprised of approximately 1,245 ha. The Andrea copper porphyry project is situated in northern Chile, over 100 km east of the city of La Serena. The property is located at the western margin of the Miocene aged El Indio belt that hosts the El Indio and Pascua Lama epithermal gold and silver deposits. The Andrea project covers over 1,200 ha at elevations ranging from 3900-4900 meters.


TSXV:TORQ - Post by User

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Post by 4putton Nov 26, 2008 1:15pm
369 Views
Post# 15611831

I found the link: Columbia-Danny-RFID-Boo Bins

I found the link: Columbia-Danny-RFID-Boo BinsOK, I admit its a slow week what with the US holiday looming but all the mystery ingredients are to be found here except for the PC card for DSRC

In answer to Blue's question: Captain, I may have found something...do we get drunk, abandon ship, break out the rafts, or keep bailing... Clearly the answer in this case is we take out the trash

https://www.baltimoreexaminer.com/business/Ulmans_green_initiative_has_some_feeling_blue.html


Ulman’s green initiative has some feeling blue

By Dan Gainor
Examiner Columnist 10/22/08

I came home the other night and discovered the Mother of All Recycling Containers at the end of my driveway. Yes, I live close to the loony enclave known as Columbia, but this is a Howard Countywide insanity.

I’m really not kidding about the size of this container. It’s allegedly 64 gallons and emblazoned with the eco-sentiment: “All Together Now,” like the Beatles were doing the soundtrack to my trash. Go to the store and pick up a gallon jug of milk or water. Now envision something blue and big enough to hold 64 of those deposited at your home without your request — with your own tax dollars. It’s not New York Giant blue, but it’s like having a lineman in your backyard.

The container is large enough that it doesn’t fit in the shed where I keep my trash can. I lumbered up my drive, wondering whether I needed a personal trailer hitch to operate my new mandatory recycling bin. This is County Exec Ken Ulman’s idea of the greening of Maryland, by forcing each of us to struggle with enormous blue recycling bins, though the County Council signed off on it as well.

Maybe we can call the young Exec Mr. Has Bin or Kid Kan, since he’s the spirit behind the nearly $3 million program. You read that right. At a time of tight budgets and projected shortfalls, Howard is trying to green its little bit of America by going Big Blue. Part of that cost includes a nifty little radio-frequency identification tag that lets the county track which home has the bin and how often you recycle. Some petty gray-suited functionary is now going to assess my antisocial recycling opposition. It’s an intersection between Big Brother and garbage, not that there’s much difference between the two.

Unfortunately, the county views the plan as a success, which means some well-meaning autocrat, I mean bureaucrat, will probably inflict it on you sometime soon. The pilot program reportedly included 5,000 containers and “recycling tonnages increased by 25 percent and trash decreased by 11 percent,” according to Kevin Enright, director of the county’s Office of Public Information.
That sounds like more than it is. It adds up to just under $40,000 for both the increased recycling material and decrease in trash.

That’s pretty basic math — just $8 a home. We currently pay $225 for sanitation services, but that price is expected to spike.

I won’t automatically fault the county’s math on this one. But it would be easy to change that tally slightly and have this become a money loser. How much of Kid Kan’s time did this cost? How about other county officers, including the public information officer? That all adds up, though I’m confident the county won’t do so.

At least Howard lets you call them and rid yourself of the Big Blue Behemoth. And I’ll certainly be calling, but I can’t help but wonder one key thing. Is it recyclable?

Dan Gainor can be seen each week on Friday afternoons on the new Fox Business Network. He is T. Boone Pickens Fellow at the Media Research Center’s Business & Media Institute, a career journalist and media commentator. He can be reached at gainorcolumn@gmail.com.

https://columbiatalk.blogspot.com/2008/10/boo-bins.html

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Boo Bins

Not everyone likes the big new recycling bins arriving in our driveways of late.

The Examiner's business columnist Dan Gainor says they are too big. The 65-gallon giant he received won't fit in his shed. (We'll supply a link when the Examiner sees fit to put one on its Web site where we can find it...Howard? Business? Search box? UPDATE: Ahhh, the link, thanks to an alert reader.).

Here's what we learn from the Fox Business channel contributor:

- Columbia is a "loony enclave."

- Maybe HoCo exec Ken Ulman should be called "Mr. Has Bin."

- And the county has attached tiny radio-frequency identification tags to the bins to track their use.

This last point previously escaped our attention. But it's true; the carts do come with RFID chips, according to the county's FAQ. And there's been some coverage in the trade press. According to this story, the county has discussed whether to send postcards to people who are not recycling. (We don't know if that ever happened.)

Gainor is not a fan of the idea. "Some petty gray-suited functionary is now going to assess my antisocial recycling opposition. It's an intersection between Big Brother and garbage, not that there's much difference between the two."

Ok, we get the feeling he doesn't much care for the county's recycling efforts.

RFID concerns aside, his blast reminds us a bit of a recent episode of "Mad Men," the TV drama centered around the 1960s Madison Avenue advertising culture. In one scene Don Draper and family are winding up an idyllic picnic by the side of the road somewhere. As they pack up, Don heaves his beer can as far as he can throw. Mom shakes the blanket free of lunchtime debris and checks her kids' hands to see that they are clean before the clan happily climbs back into the Cadillac for the ride home.

The camera pans back to show a wide shot of trash scattered on the hillside.

Someone else's problem.

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