I am glad you caught this, a waste of space and American money, I was not near 
my computer to pass this on, when I read this. I still can not see how they 
overbuild it using SI Metric units, I tried several different SI Metric units 
and pretended it was 'American', made it smaller than what they claim, so can 
someone explain it to me? 


Bruce E. Arkwright, Jr
Erie PA
Linux and Metric User and Enforcer


I will only invest in nukes that are 150 gigameters away. How much solar energy 
have you collected today?
Id put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we 
dont have to wait til oil and coal run out before we tackle that. I wish I had 
a few more years left. -- Thomas Edison♽☯♑


May 25, 2013 09:58:14 AM, [email protected] wrote:
I think this is workforce issue, more than anything. I have spoken to some 
companies who would like to build in SI units but the typical construction 
worker exiting our public school system is not qualified. The summary argument 
is that it is cheaper to convert the plans, than to pay to fix the mistakes 
made trying to build in metric units. 
 ;
A related example, I am friends with a sand control engineer who works on oil 
rigs. It is an international company. They attempted to bring metric tankers to 
the US. The oil workers made so many mistakes on the rig that the company 
decided it was cheaper to build tankers for use only in the U.S than to correct 
all the errors…..
 ;
We must start to change the Education system or we will continue to produce a 
workforce ill-equipped to work in metric units. 
 ;
From: Kilopascal [mailto:[email protected]] 
>Sent: Thursday, May 2, 2013 8:52 PM
>To: U.S. Metric Association
>Subject: Thomas F. Eagleton Federal Courthouse: Most overbuilt in nation | 
>ksdk.com
 ;
 ;
http://www.ksdk.com/news/article/378267/3/Eagleton-Courthouse-Most-overbuilt-in-nation-
 ;
 ;
A government report reveals the Thomas F. Eagleton Federal Courthouse in 
downtown St. Louis is the most over built courthouse in the nation. The 
building dominates the St. Louis skyline. At 557 feet, it is the tallest 
courthouse in the country and the first built using the metric system. 
 ;
The GAO didn't look at whether the government's use of the metric system is 
part of the problem when it comes to over-building Eagleton and the other 
courthouses.

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