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Private businesses encroaching on public property
Editor;
I was heartened by the first page item about Koh Larn
residents protesting at City Hall over illegal developments on the island -
I emailed a local condo project, but not surprisingly received no reply to
this.
I am always confused when developers advertise “private
beach” anywhere in Thailand. Everyone knows that the law in Thailand does
not allow private beaches, or does that rule not apply to everyone?
City Hall seem to have no control over businesses
encroaching on public areas, witness the businesses in the Soy Day/Night
area that think the pavements and part of the public road belongs to them,
and even stranger, on the nice new paved walkway at the end of Jomtien Beach
Road which I would assume should be for the benefit of pedestrians.
Restaurants have appropriated it for tables and chairs, which is nice for
them and the diners but is not strictly what the pavement is for, or is it?
Perhaps one day the pavements will eventually be
completed on Thappraya Road, making it possible to walk to Jomtien Beach
from the flyover to the Macha Nu Statue (keep dreaming baby). Trying to walk
towards the beach from the statue on the right hand side, businesses have
again appropriated the pavements.
City Hall seem not to care or is there some other reason
these abuses are ignored, one has to wonder…
Love Pattaya but some things rankle!
RW
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Nothing is more flexible and yielding than the Water Cycle
Editor;
A Chinese proverb suggests: “The wise adapt themselves to
circumstances, as water moulds itself to the pitcher.” A refreshing Sign of
Life, pure thirst-quenching water is clear, colorless, tasteless, formless,
shapeless and free-flowing. Nothing is more flexible and yielding than the
Water Cycle. The main lesson to be learned from the debilitating flood
crisis is the urgent need for everyone in Thailand to voluntarily join
positive energy forces to work together for the common good and to help
enable those most in need, providing supportive emergency resources for the
proud, disheartened but resilient flood victims to help themselves and to
regain some semblance of routine survivalist coping in their unsettled
lives.
Local administrative bodies should be given increased
autonomy and authority to determine what works best for and within their
village communities. The National Reform Committee has called for
decentralised, cooperative local decision-making regarding economic, social,
political and security matters. Truly representative democratically elected
leaders should also be primarily responsible for prioritizing and running
their own affairs, including overseeing local police, operating community
schools and managing natural resources in their rural areas. There is an
urgent need for a system-wide overhaul, especially in the aloof,
Bangkok-centric Interior and Education ministries, in order to increase
community-based autonomy and relegate out-of-touch, imposed work
responsibilities. The aim should be to promote people’s independence,
yielding to those most involved in day-to-day decision-making and
problem-solving of relevant issues.
Community schools foster effective, strong partnerships,
sharing accountability for mutually agreed-upon results, serving as
human-service magnets to look after and care for the welfare of rural
villagers related to physical, mental, spiritual, emotional and behavioural
health issues, family support, youth activities and community development
projects. They aim to help promote a social climate that is secure and
supportively respectful, where there is mutual, effective collaboration
among parents, families and school staff to motivate and engage civic-minded
learners, instilling self-confident dignity. Budget-allocation priorities
should balance longstanding inequities where those with the greatest needs
receive the least help. “What’s in it for me?” mindsets should yield to
“What’s best for the common good?” A leaner, cleaner, keener MOE should
transfer redundant, inactive positions back into the classroom, changing
from top-downslide authoritarianism to encourage bottoms-up,
what-matters-most self-determination instead. The prerequisite is
relinquishing vested interest, favoured control and connections-based
nepotism through increased community-based autonomy.
A Kenyan proverb states: “Treat the Earth well. It was
not given to you by your parents; it was loaned to you by your children.”
Critical, intensive care attention must also be paid to the extensive and
profound interaction between humankind and nature to effectively plan
immediate reconstruction steps to deal with issues related to climate change
and to create an Action Plan and Timeline to cooperatively develop
long-range infrastructure strategies.
Chanchai Prasertson
Bangkok
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HEADLINES [click on headline to view story]
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Private businesses encroaching on public property
Nothing is more flexible and yielding than the Water Cycle
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Letters published in the Mailbag
of Pattaya Mail
are also published here.
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It is noticed that the letters herein in no way reflect the opinions of the editor or writers for Pattaya Mail, but are unsolicited letters from our readers, expressing their own opinions. No anonymous letters or those without genuine addresses are printed, and, whilst we do not object to the use of a nom de plume, preference will be
given to those signed.
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