Saturday, September 11, 2010

Aliens invade Lantau

Space Aliens or Streetlights? UFOs Reported in Hong Kong Lightning Storm

Lee Speigel

Lee Speigel Contributor

(Sept. 10) -- Were they UFOs or ordinary street lamps? That's the question being raised after Wednesday night's spectacular, record-breaking lightning storm over Hong Kong.

Just within the first hour after midnight on Thursday, the Hong Kong Observatory recorded 13,102 lightning strikes around Hong Kong.

According to Radio Television Hong Kong, or RTHK, the observatory received many calls from people claiming to see UFOs during the fierce storm near the Tai Lam Tunnel and in the Wanchai and Happy Valley districts of the city.

The observatory said the UFO reports were most likely street lamps. Meanwhile, the chairwoman of the Hong Kong UFO Club, Moon Fong, confirmed that UFO sightings were reported on their website.
The Observatory assumed the UFOs were misidentified street lamps, according to an observatory scientific officer, W.C. Woo.

Whether they were street lights or not, it's not the first time UFOs have been reported or even photographed during intense storms. Maybe they need a free burst of electrical energy provided by the lightning bolts.

Or maybe they're just street lamps.

http://www.aolnews.com/weird-news/article/hong-kong-lightning-storm-ufos-probably-street-lamps/19628456

Friday, September 3, 2010

Rehab


Rehab school renews push for Mui Wo

The principal of Christian Zheng Sheng College has renewed his call for
the government to speed up the school's relocation to Mui Wo.


Friday, September 03, 2010

The principal of Christian Zheng Sheng College has renewed his
call for the government to speed up the school's relocation to Mui Wo.

Alman Chan Siu-cheuk said there is great demand for the drug rehabilitation

school, with at least 20 inquiries from parents each week. Several employers

have also offered jobs to graduates.

However, the relocation is being opposed by Mui Wo residents and the

Education Bureau has been sitting on the school's application to join the

3-3-4 secondary education stream.

"The government says it has been bargaining with Mui Wo residents but

still needs more time," Chan said.

In addition, he said plans to temporarily expand the current site are still

being put on hold.

A spokesman from the Narcotics Division of the Security Bureau said it

has been actively exchanging views on temporary improvement measures,

long-term reprovisioning

arrangements and other related matters with the Christian Zheng Sheng

Association. "We have all along supported the proposal in principle, which

isin line with the government's anti-drug policy," the spokesman said.

"The Legislative Council education panel is following up the matter. The

administration will respond to members' suggestions and provide a

progress report later this month," the spokesman said.

An Education Bureau spokeswoman said the Education Ordinance would be

strictly followed when processing the application to join the secondary stream.

SERINAH HO



Monday, August 23, 2010

Insane school argument



Above-some pics of Pui-O beach



School faces stiff fine for noise at recess after neighbours complain

Expatriate children at an international primary school in Pui O on Lantau Island are in no doubt about what the locals think of their school. NO NOISY SCHOOL 30-centimetre-high letters scream on a six-metre banner strapped to a roadside railing. Local villagers who erected the banner have complained to the Environmental Protection Department about the noise made by the 70 pupils, aged seven to 11, during recess at Lantau International School. And it could force the school to shut down. The department has issued it with a noise abatement notice, failure to comply with which could cost the school a HK$200,000 fine plus HK$20,000 for every day the order is disregarded. The school has lodged an appeal, which will be heard on Monday. The EPD found the level of noise from the school to be above the permitted 60 decibels. Staff of the school who also measured the noise said it varied between 62 and 65 decibels, slightly over the limit. Principal Serge Berthier and senior teacher Tom Vujnovac say it will be very difficult to pay the fines if the appeal fails. Plus we have to pay heavy legal fees for representation at the appeal, Vujnovac said. And it is not just the noise that is upsetting villagers in the beach resort town just a few kilometres from Mui Wo, the scene of another row with villagers over a school. Pui O residents say they do not see the need for an expensive school with an expatriate teaching staff and a body of mainly expatriate pupils in their small village, where there is already a free public school. Eddie Tam and his wife, Jenny, who live next to the international school - which occupies three village houses in a residential area - said its facilities were inadequate. This school is charging fees close to that of private schools where children have much better facilities, they said. Fees are HK$5,450 a month, and tuition is in English and follows the Basic English Curriculum. Vujnovac said most Pui O residents welcomed the school, but the Tams did not agree with him. Eddie Tam said that when they objected to planning permission he collected 250 signatures of people who lived in Pui O and did not want the school. Police estimate the population of Pui O to be about 1,000. No data is available on how many of these are expatriates. Berthier said the EPD was discriminating against expatriates. There are locally owned holiday homes in Pui O that are very noisy, often through the night. Yet these are never served with such notices, he said. Vujnovac said Pui O public school staff used hand-held loudhailers and roof-mounted loudspeakers to address the pupils, yet they had never received a noise abatement notice. Tam and his wife lead the objectors, but they said three village heads were backing them. He did not deny that the teaching staff were qualified but said the children have no playground; there is less than a metre of ground they can use for leisure breaks. He added that down the road is a public school with plenty of space and a large playground, and also with fully qualified staff. Expatriates are misguided if they think their children cannot be educated in Cantonese. The EPD said that noise complaints had been received about the school since late 2007. Noise measurements taken of the school at a complainant's premises confirmed that the statutory noise limit was being exceeded.

. South China Morning Post

Some Views;

    SteveG

    There is more to it than this. The acerbic head of the school reneged on some promises he made to the local community and they have not forgotten this.

    If he actually tried to engage people instead of just being nasty he may find he actually makes progress.

    Unfortunately you can't teach an old dog new tricks and will continue to be at loggerheads with the local community - including the school children's parents - for the foreseeable future.

    Real shame as it is the excellent teaching staff that bear the brunt of this and they deserve better.

    6th June 2010, 12:10 AM

    Agree with SteveG.

Unique school

A primary school like no other in Hong Kong

From biglychee.com

http://biglychee.com/blog/2010/03/17/a-primary-school-like-no-other-in-hong-kong/

That’s the claim made by Lantau International School, not least because of its unique location: scenic south Lantau. The lower school is in Tong Fuk, and the upper in Pui O – both villages with beaches, no less. How’s this for a school photo?

Click on the picture to hear kids playing at 62dB, courtesy of Amadou & Mariam!

LIS now has another distinction. It seems it has become the first school in the whole of Hong Kong to be served with a noise abatement notice by the Environmental Protection Department on account of the sound of its kids.

This happened soon after the growing school finally opened new premises in a renovated, derelict hotel at Pui O last month. That project – you can see this coming a mile off – faced peevish opposition on the part of certain sons of the local soil.* EPD inspectors turned up and positioned their microphone right outside. Apparently, they waited for some time before recording any noise, but sure enough, lunchtime came around, the children came out and the valiant EPD officials registered 62 decibels.

Which surely makes LIS students the quietest kids in the Big Lychee. However, the EPD take their job seriously – why else do you think Hong Kong is such a calm, almost silent place? – and slapped the school with the abatement notice for exceeding the 60dB limit in ‘village type development’.........continued (follow the link)

http://biglychee.com/blog/2010/03/17/a-primary-school-like-no-other-in-hong-kong/

Lantau School

From 'Biglychee.com'

http://biglychee.com/blog/2010/08/19/a-primary-school-like-no-other-in-hong-kong-part-2/

A primary school like no other in Hong Kong, part 2

The persecution of Lantau International School at the hands of murky ‘rural interests’ and the Environmental Protection Department continues, with the Noise Control Appeal Board confirming the validity of a noise reduction order. When outside during playtime, the kids create a noise level of 62dB, which, in plain English, could be worse. But it’s 2dB above the limit for the area, known for its graveyard-like silence and its local residents’ extreme aural hypersensitivity. So LIS has to find a way to cut the din.

The South China Morning Post reports the matter as one of a villager called Jenny Tam driven to torment by children laughing and playing music (as, in all frankness, I would be). An alternative story is one of apparent collusion between the EPD and the local village leadership who seem to have it in for the racially mixed institution; another school in the neighbourhood, full of all-Chinese students, can carry on as usual.......continued (follow link)

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Monday, August 16, 2010

Dengue

Dengue fever warning issued

16-08-2010


The government has issued a warning against dengue fever. It says the latest figures show that there's been a rise in the monthly average ovitrap index from 11 percent in June to 13 percent in July. The ovitrap indices reflect the prevalence of Aedes albo-pictus, a mosquito vector for dengue fever transmission.

The Food and Environmental Hygiene Department has urged the public to step up anti-mosquito measures and stay alert as the current rainy season is most favourable for mosquito breeding. It said the inter-departmental anti-mosquito response mechanism has been activated in six districts which recorded readings at or above the alert rate of 20 percent. They are Diamond Hill, Tsim Sha Tsui, Sheung Shui, Tung Chung, Ma On Shan and Pok Fu Lam.