The Safety Engineer’s Reply Will Make You Wonder.

stainer
The Cytology staff inspects the new stainer.

“Dr. Raff, the new stainer won’t turn on.”

“That’s strange, the electrical safety engineer said it was fine yesterday…”

Our lab has been in business for almost 12 years now. We use lots of automated analyzers, stainers, cover-slippers. They are subjected to daily use, so plenty of wear and tear. We purchase some of them used from a handful of vendors that specialize in refurbished laboratory equipment. And being of a fairly small size, we don’t have much back-up. A particular machine better run or the serviceman better get here quickly. We keep up a good relationship with the service companies, we don’t want their technicians feeling like lonely Maytag repairmen (or women.)

We also want to keep a safe work environment and meet our credentialing requirements, so we hire an electrical safety engineer to check all our equipment each year. The rule is simple; if it has a plug, it gets inspected. He tests each piece for leakage and shorting and any other electric hazard and slaps an “Inspected” sticker on it. And any new piece of equipment we bring into the lab gets a safety check before it gets put into service. We don’t want anyone shocked when they flip the “On” switch for the first time.

Last week we took delivery of two pieces of equipment, a new incubator for our ever-increasing number of bacteriology cultures (shipped with the wrong power cord,) and a gently used stainer for our Cytology Department, replacing a workhorse stainer whose microswitches were failing and unreplaceable. The new incubator looks sharp and it only took a handful of emails and phone calls to get the correct power cord from the manufacturer. And the replacement stainer is more environmentally and worker safety friendly than its predecessor, so that’s a win-win situation.

I called Bill, our electrical safety engineer, to let him know about the new instruments and he came yesterday afternoon when the lab was quiet for the safety check. Bill was here for a half hour and then stopped by my office to drop of his worksheet and let me know our equipment passed the safety check; we were ready to rock.

So imagine my surprise this morning when the staff couldn’t get the stainer to turn on! We read the quick start manual, flipped the switches, checked the circuit breakers, but nothing happened. No lights flashing, no whirring engines.

Once again, I called Bill. “Our stainer won’t turn on, but you had it working yesterday, right?” “Well,” he said “it passed its safety check, but when I turned the power on nothing happened. You seemed busy, so I didn’t mention it to you. I guess I should have.”

Um, yeah! Not telling me the equipment you just checked is “safe” but won’t actually operate is sort of like a pilot announcing halfway to Europe “We don’t really have enough fuel to cross the Atlantic, but you all seemed to be in a hurry so I took off without refueling. Please prepare for an emergency water landing.”

Our great lab staff did the troubleshooting and solved the problem, but from now on, no service person leaves the front door without answering one basic question. “Does it work???”


For those of you asking after the blog earlier this week, the new car is an Audi A6. So far, it purrs.


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Cars Come and Go, But the Best Leave an Impression.

A rainy day on which to say goodbye.

Tonight Barb and I will sign the papers, write the check, and trade in my black stallion for its replacement.  It will all happen at a dealer out in Naperville, a suburb as foreign to a Northsider like me as wins are to the current Bulls team. It took weeks of combing car dealer websites, days of studying comparison charts, and hours of test drives before I found the low-mileage, gently pre-driven car I was looking for. A new companion to make my daily commute down the Tri-State Tollway speed by–at a speed acceptable to me and allowable by the state highway patrol.

It is not easy to give up the old black beauty. She started as another man’s mistress, the back up to his primary ride. And since she was his mistress he loaded her up. Every amenity available for a 2011 luxury car — infrared night vision, rear seat DVD screens, a lovely coffee-colored leather interior, driver assist speed control–nothing was too good for her. And under it all, the lovely eight-cylinder engine that purred.

But he was an embezzler and they both paid the price. He went from Wall Street to a prison, she went from a suburban New York villa to an impound lot. She traveled west after her dealer auction and ended up in my hands. And we melded.

For four years we have zipped along. The night vision and the DVD screens have languished, but I have loved the brown leather. The powerful engine synching up with the speed control has been a perfect match for my driving style, purring until I would roar into the left lane. And although the car always felt a little stiff and uncomfortable to Barb, I have loved every minute of driving her.

But now she is a little gray. She is showing her age, showing all those miles I have pushed her through. Things that used to work don’t work anymore, and like any aging heiress, she is getting too expensive to keep beautiful, and much too expensive to maintain.

The new car doesn’t have as many features or as interesting a backstory. But it has enough oomph and glamor to satisfy my desires, and a long, long warranty to satisfy my practical side.

So I will Waze my way back to Naperville tonight as the Bulls battle the Cavaliers. I may not be trading for Lebron James, but I still think I am trading for a winner!

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#metoo. Here’s Why I Was A Lucky One.

metooI was a 13-year-old kid, the son of the company’s office manager, spending a blistering hot summer helping out in the warehouse. The guy was about 25, part of the regular warehouse crew, pulling boxes of shoes and socks for delivery to the 20 or so stores the company had in the Chicago area. He had no power over me, at least as far as the employment situation. On the contrary, I am sure that one word from me and he would have been out on the street, looking for a minimum wage job somewhere else. It was a complete reversal of the typical workplace harassment situation.

But that didn’t stop him from being the aggressor, in a quiet, insidious, way. The warehouse contained rows and rows of high shelving units packed to the ceiling with cartons of shoes. Standing in the aisles between those racks was like being in the middle of an Iowa cornfield, hidden from view and detection. It was in one of those secretive corridors that he made his move.

First, he showed me some “French postcards ” that he claimed to have just found on the sidewalk outside the warehouse. Porn was much harder to find in those pre-Hustler, pre-Internet, pre-Comcast days, so it was quite a surprise to have an older guy showing me risque snapshots. He followed the peep show with increasingly personal questions until I finally got the drift of where he hoped this encounter was heading.

I mumbled  “not interested,” in my 13-year old Bar Mitzvah boy’s voice. He backed off.  I didn’t say a word about it to anyone, certainly not to my dad. The other warehouse workers were unaware of the incident but played nasty tricks on the man on the basis of generalized homophobia. I can only wonder if there may have been other propositions made between the shoe racks, but at least the other recipients would have been above the age of consent.

Was I a victim? Yes. Was he a predator? Absolutely. Was I traumatized by the episode? I don’t think so, although it is certainly made enough of an impression on me that it is the only incident of that summer job that I clearly recall. While it was unfortunate that my first interaction with someone who I recognized to be gay was a negative one, that has not colored my association with the many LGBT individuals with whom I have worked, celebrated and shared with over the years.

I don’t believe I have ever acted inappropriately towards a woman-I don’t believe I ever will. But perhaps looking back on this episode helps me understand the pain, the discomfort, and the torment of  women who must deal with harassment on a routine basis, particularly when the predator has the power to put the victim’s well-being or livelihood at risk. And after reading the outpouring of #metoo personal stories this week,  I will be ready to intercede if I become aware of that type of behavior around me.

So that our mothers, wives, and daughters can stop becoming #metoo.

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NRA Got it Wrong-Researcher Discovers the Second Amendment Protects the Right to BARE Arms!

Alexander Hamilton
Alexander Hamilton, Father of “Bare Arms.”

In a startling announcement, T. Mueller-Hinton Ph.D. of the National Constitutional Archivists (NCA) has conclusively demonstrated that the Second Amendment to the Constitution contains a transcription error. After reviewing notes from the attendees of the 1787 Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia and numerous drafts of the Bill of Rights, Dr. Mueller-Hinton has clear proof that the amendment speaks of the rights of citizens to have uncovered upper extremities.

“The evidence was there all along,” Mueller-Hinton said in his press conference on the steps of the Supreme Court in Washington, DC. “We know that English spelling wasn’t totally standardized in the 1700’s and the words like bear and bare were frequently interchanged. Up until Draft 4, the word is consistently written as “bare”, but sometime between then and the final copy, a scribe switched to the alternate spelling “bear.” This amendment never was about guns, rifles or bazookas. It is strictly about bare arms.”

Dr. Mueller-Hinton, a post-graduate student at the National University of Traditional Scholars (NUTS,) a Minnesota think tank, began his research project after viewing a production of “Hamilton,” the Lin-Manuel Miranda musical about the life of Founding Father Alexander Hamilton. “After I learned that Mr. Hamilton was born and lived his early life in the Caribbean, I began to wonder what impact that had on his thought process. In reading some of his “Federalist Papers” I noticed commentary on the joy of feeling the sun on his sleeveless arms while a youth. He was unhappy with the stuffy dress conventions of the United States. It was easy to put 2 and 2 together and come up with 4 after that.”

Clint McWhitlock, a spokesman for the National Rifle Association (NRA), immediately released a statement stating that Constitutional protection was not really needed for his association’s goal of “a handgun in every pot, two rifles in every garage.” The statement further went on to say “firearms are the American way of life, and we don’t need the Second Amendment to preserve that. After all, we have great laws like Concealed Carry now.”

Also releasing a joint statement were Elizabeth Shagreen MD, President of the Dermatological Society of North America and Gordon Calomine of the Coppertone Corporation. “Suns don’t kill people, people kill people. We are advancing legislation to require all bare body parts must be protected by sunscreen with an SPF of 75 or higher. We cannot let this new Constitutional interpretation cause us to lose lives.”

Vice-President Mike Pence commented that it was OK for Americans to get a suntan, as long as they didn’t kneel while doing so.


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Ten Blogs I Didn’t Write-Would Number 8 Have Been A Winner?

kittenThere haven’t been any new blogs from me for a week or so. It is not that I haven’t been thinking about my ChicagoNow readers, I just haven’t found a topic that has inspired the necessary 500 words. I suppose it is a form of writer’s block, but as long as writing is not my profession, that particular malady doesn’t overly damage my psyche.

Just to prove that I have been giving it a shot, here is a list of 10 topics that I have tried, and failed, to blog about.

  1. Our cat that thinks it is a dog. Barb wants me to write a book about this one, but are there enough cat ladies out there who would want to read it?
  2. A story in the New York Times about the difficulties in the Medical Examiners Office in New Hampshire. Overdose deaths have lead to an overworked ME. While in training I spent several months in the Cook County Medical Examiners Office, but I lack the knowledge and skill to adequately discuss what this story is really about, the opioid crisis.
  3. The distressing comments of a rabbi who has buried 28 young adults, lost to overdose deaths. See #2.
  4. The appeal of sitting in a dark room and listening to an album (ok, it was digital, not vinyl) from start to finish. For those interested in my musical taste, the album was the first Crosby, Stills and Nash release, the one creatively titled “Crosby, Stills, and Nash.” It is the one with the song that is the source of my ringtone for Barb–can you guess which one?
  5. The sounds of silence. One afternoon I actually turned off the radio in my office. I gave up the usual background noise for a surprising calmness. After a day or two I broke, and the radio came back on.
  6. My new role as a teacher.  I am educating my fitness trainer about classic rock music. For every extra ten push-ups he makes me do, I lecture him on an even more obscure band from the 60’s or 70’s. Quicksilver Messenger Service anyone?
  7. Why we do this. ChicagoNow bloggers were posting on the CN  Facebook page about why they write. It made me think about why I keep writing, but it didn’t turn into 500 words of contemplation. It did make me think I need a new name for this blog, since I am no longer writing about building a house. Any suggestions?
  8. Another assault on Trump. I was working on an acrostic, with the first letter of each line linking up to spell “Great Again.” I stopped after “Greedy” and Repulsive.” I suppose the poem, if ever completed, could be about Harvey Weinstein too.
  9. The return of “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” I have never been much of an enthusiast, and just wonder if Jeff Garlin does nothing but scream in real life, too.
  10. Life hacking. The little sideways things that make life work better. Barb and I share one that I can’t discuss here…

Ten concepts, but no blog posts. I’ll keep pushing on my writer’s brick wall, maybe it will come tumbling down soon!

Peace and Love,

Les

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