
This first full day in Kentucky was spent running around doing all the little things that need to be done when you’re only in the city for a few days a year, if that much. Click here to see the stops on today’s itinerary.
Charlie Dittmeier's Home Page
This first full day in Kentucky was spent running around doing all the little things that need to be done when you’re only in the city for a few days a year, if that much. Click here to see the stops on today’s itinerary.
I didn’t have to hurry this morning but was able to eat breakfast at Maryknoll before heading to the airport for the trip to Louisville, Kentucky where I would see my family. Click here for pictures from the day.
Today I started a three-week trip to the US and Taiwan for meetings with Maryknoll. Click here to see some pictures from the beginning of the journey.
This is the record of a trip to the United States and Taiwan for Maryknoll meetings. The first part of the USA trip was a visit to my family in Kentucky.
Much more to come….
Wow, this is the longest I have ever gone without being able to post something here on the website. Sorry! It’s been a combination of travel schedules, busy times when I needed to be at places here in Kentucky, and attention to work that has followed me from Cambodia that has kept me offline. I hope tomorrow, Saturday (it’s 10:41 PM Friday night here in Kentucky as I write) will allow me to start posting about this trip.
I am sorry for the missed post yesterday. I was swamped with stuff as I prepared to leave. I’m heading to the airport in twenty minutes to go to the US for meetings. From there I go to more meetings in Taiwan before returning to Phnom Penh on 30 October. I arrive in New York Wednesday night and hope to be able to post then.
October 8-10 are the three public holidays of this year’s Pchum Ben festival, a traditional religious occasion when people honor their ancestors, particularly by making offerings of rice balls in the pagodas. Click here for some photos from the beginning of the holiday period.
Many jurisdictions require hands-free arrangements if a driver wants to use a phone while behind the wheel. That’s probably better than holding a phone and talking while driving although the distraction factor is still here. In Cambodia not that many people have cars but they do have lots of motorcycles and they do want to talk while driving those. This is one method, sticking the phone under the helmet next to your ear.
Headlines and news reports from United States media frequently make reference to the campaign to raise the minimum wage in the U.S. to $15 an hour. The minimum wage is also a matter for discussion in Cambodia but here the goal of organized labor is a minimum wage of $182 PER MONTH. The current wage norm here is $170 per month, raised before last July’s elections in order to get the garment industry workers to support the ruling party.
Tens of thousands of garment factory workers–usually young women–ride to work each day jammed, standing up, in the back of open trucks. Many of them are killed in the frequent accidents when trucks overturn and collide from speeding and throw bodies everywhere. The government’s response? “Training” drivers to obey the law and “urging” them to get driver’s licenses. That’s a neat idea.