The township is under a water boil advisory. They decided the way to inform people was on the website, through phone if you have a phone on your water account, through a system no one knew existed, or Facebook.

They’re offering a case of water per household for free though!

That announcement was only through Facebook. Great. All gone.

  • TheOubliette@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    This is literally something that already happens every day for junk mailers and junk from Amazon and you’re trying to die on the hill of saying it’s basically impossible. There are regions where direct verbal or written notice is required by law. These are things that happen and happen efficiently and in very boring ways, despite your continued attempts to argue about this from the position of, “nuh-uh it’s too hard” ad nauseum.

    And this is in defense of instead publishing this information in a dark corner as if it’s Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

    “But look, you found the notice, didn’t you?” “Yes,” said Arthur, “yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying ‘Beware of the Leopard’."

    And no, I don’t think the water company would have an army of 50 people ready to do an organized canvas of the town (unlike the Postal Service, which has a roster of dedicated mail carriers)

    Paying 50 people for one day of flyering is an army? How much do you think it costs to send a letter? A water boil notice already means they have failed their own liability and could cause very serious and expensive harms. Yes they have to pay for that (possibly literal) shit.

    Just admit you were being silly, not clever, and move on.

    • spongebue@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Naw, I think “but we have cars” was silly, not clever (funny how you dropped that pretty quickly). I think “but you can get people and a plan immediately while also fixing the problem” is silly, not clever (admittedly places that require certain notices will also have a plan to implement it as required by law, not I’m thinking about wherever OP is which I’m assuming doesn’t have that). I think comparing with organizations that need large coverage for their daily operations (not necessarily 100% of homes in a day, mind you) is silly, not clever.

      Feel free to move on.

      • TheOubliette@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        Naw, I think “but we have cars” was silly, not clever (funny how you dropped that pretty quickly).

        Hmm I never said that. You’d rather make stuff up than acknowledge an everyday thing is actually entirely feasible?

        I think “but you can get people and a plan immediately while also fixing the problem” is silly, not clevet (admittedly places that require certain notices will also have a plan to implement it as required by law, not I’m thinking about wherever OP is which I’m assuming doesn’t have that).

        Thanks for explaining how your idea that this can only be done ad hoc is actually dumb, refuting your own point!

        I think comparing with organizations that need large coverage for their daily operations (not necessarily 100% of homes in a day, mind you) is silly, not clever.

        What are you even talking about? Use your words.

        Feel free to move on.

        But your bad faith obstinance is funny. You can go ahead and ignore my advice and embarrass yourself as much as you’d like.

        • spongebue@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Hmm I never said that.

          This you?

          You drive door to door leaving flyers. […] Why do you think municipal or county staff can’t drive

          Anyway…

          What are you even talking about? Use your words.

          You’re talking about what Amazon and USPS can do. They can do it (Amazon not every home in a given area) because they’re equipped to. Saying that the water company should be able to cover a town with flyers because USPS goes door to door is about as logical as saying USPS should fix a water main because the water company does it.

          Now, if the law requires something that will always change the calculus but that doesn’t seem to be the case here

          • TheOubliette@lemmy.ml
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            2 days ago

            Hmm I never said that.

            This you?

            You drive door to door leaving flyers. […] Why do you think municipal or county staff can’t drive

            Anyway…

            Hey there champ, those are different words meaning different things. Love this strategy of yours known as, “pretend to be less literate than a gradeschooler”, though.

            You’re talking about what Amazon and USPS can do. They can do it (Amazon not every home in a given area) because they’re equipped to. Saying that the water company should be able to cover a town with flyers because USPS goes door to door is about as logical as saying USPS should fix a water main because the water company does it.

            Okay so there’s this thing called paying for goods and services. I know, difficult concept, but stick with me. Companies and agencies with liabolities write things called “contracts” or “budgets” where they pay others to handle needs for goods and services. Such as paying USPS to knock on doors like they often will for packages, leaving behind a flyer. Crazy, I know. There are already municipalities that use Amazon delivery drivers for services due to neoliberal austerity, but that is an actual thing that happens.

            These are just some competent, simple options. They could also use a slew of government workers, contractors, hell they could be lazy asses and supplement with day laborers. The sky’s the limit.

            Now, if the law requires something that will always change the calculus but that doesn’t seem to be the case here

            Oh? How does it change the calculus?