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VICTORIA Tammi Dimock is a realtor with Royal LePage Realty in Sooke. On Thursday, just before talking with CTV News, she received a touch base message from a fellow realtor. It says get in there and get my offer in if I want to present on this one, said Dimock. There’s already five in hand. The message is in regards to a house that is for sale that she showed her clients. The listing is what is referred to as a delayed offer listing. He wants them all in by 1 p.m. and is presenting at 3 p.m., said Dimock.
Meanwhile, Opposition Leader
Anthony Albanese was also putting in the hard yards, arriving at consultancy firm EY’s Sydney harbourside offices at the same time armed with several staff and a piece of kit that turned out to be his trusted portable autocue.
The travelling autocue, not a new thing apparently, helped the Opposition Leader slam his rival as “the Prime Minister who doesn’t hold a hose … ” He also pitched Labor to the room as a party which had learnt lessons from its election defeat, telling the crowd: “We had 282 fully costed policies … probably a tad too many.” You think?
For a week in late April, some people from Sooke to Port Renfrew detected a strange phenomenon. Their electric clocks were running slow, losing maybe five, 10, 15 minutes a day. Realtor Tim Ayres, 40, noticed the alarm clock he had received as an eighth birthday present was lagging, but just figured it was finally showing its age. Likewise, Shannon Moneo assumed the clock in her kitchen was starting to fail, but then noticed others in her house were slowing, too. Then Facebook lit up with scores of stories of people who couldn’t figure out how they ended up being late for work, or whatever.