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Provo, UT - Heavy Rescue 21
Rosenbauer Commander
#larry shapiro#larryshapiroblog.com#shapirophotography.net#larryshapiro#larryshapiro.tumblr.com#fire truck#firetruck#rosenbauer america#rosenbaueramerica#commander#mountains#ProvoFD#Provo Fire Department#ProvoUT#waterfall#heavy rescue squad
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Provisional Irish Republican Army (Provos, EON)
Confederate Southern Army: In the prequels, the Confederate Southern Army, was portrayed as Nixon; Finis Valorum. It's the new trend in art, portraying California Republicans with a ZODIAC naval or airline draft unit, as racist white southerners supporting Lynyrd Skynyrd.
The MI-6 Poverty Draft: In the Nolan trilogy, the villains were portrayed as MI-6 from poverty, the CIA's operand; America now has access to calculus banking derivatives, a catalyst reaction removing from simple interest debt of the Mob (a foreign espionage estate owned, outside of the fire marshal, the Swastika). Instead of using MI-6 solely as playwrights, Scientology (Hitler Youth) has been replaced with American spies.
The Foreign Aid Investment: Star Trek, has featured Karl Urban, "Bones", being the last survivor of a medical bay blowout; however his character, is oil economics, shutting down Cape Wind and making it popular for American university students to take energy classes, for power grids and disimproved power rates of appliances; the sales of poverty surplus, to the African community, outside of the Mossad's claim to be NSA; NSA, a MUD system, taught on the internet, and prior, in teacher's union games, DARPA.
Black Lives Matter: A new movement, out of the "Caucasian" pizza, the African distaste of tomato and deadly nightshade, behind the combined and private drug market rates, drug dealers paid as if upon wage, with an extended salary out of purchase of marijuana, signaled through sales of marijuana on the cleared market; the black market removed, as racketeering, through Synagogues; Nietzsche's work, refuted, and German opium sales by CVS, made illegal.
American Women's Union: The VOICE Australian union, forming through protection of women threatened with incarceration by British Diet forces in Japan, the Yakuza; the shutdown of pimping services of France and Germany, South Park Studios, and the removal of contract laws on those visiting dominatrixes, a return to the concept of prostitution as fetish. Common economics laws, introduced to housing of employee in the blue collar industries, and the worker's rally removed, in favor of the women's rally; the armed female, with a handgun or rifle, not the gay man, the school shooter. The forbidden term of homosexual, as Muslim, returned to the markets, and the common expulsion of the homosexual and their female friends, lesbians, from society and into poverty.
TV Tropes: The shutdown of the Iranian-Tehran Jewish claim of intellectual property for oil rights, and the removal of the retarded, those Germans rigging and claiming lottery bets, to obselescence, under Hungarian and Polish masters, to protect America's drilling rights. The repetitive use of grocery store logic, on the internet, any using, attracted to claim of royalty contract under Stan Lee's internal housing logic; however rendered flabbergasted, at own claim of production as owned by self, instead of owned by commodity introduced with currency attached; labor of good, the payment and paid source of economy, for farm numbers; not seizure of digits of bank, the housing market in narcotics, for falsely produced work, the minor act on stage of theater.
Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer: The children's hero, as impossible to approach, and not based on any work of fit or form to recognize genome, type, or law, the common pederasty as accused of otherwise if placing a human being in a children's game or film, and the nullification of ramified suits of claim, to reveal the individual applying law as a homosexual; a queen, the poorest type of man or woman available, the incompetently tutored by parent, in suits of law of plaintiff having produced success in court. The removal of Dr. Joshua Golden's office, by the shifted engram of selection of character, each character either picking Sullivan, in "The Departed", or forced into Costello, the spy for the British John Hancock firm, the Tong; the exploitation of American, Chinese, and African labor, for a division of community in white views of foreign culture; held around the dinner table, of racist households, the French and English. A dominance of Irish power.
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The Emperor and Judgement
Jaipur India, three days after the defeat of the manticore
Nelen groaned, sitting in the rec room of Barjar manor with his head in his hands. His phone was no longer buzzing with notifications for text messages, missed calls, voicemail, and various social media direct messages. This was because it was sitting across the table with a wooden stake driven through it. He had kept himself mostly anonymous on social media, sticking around on there just to keep an eye out for anything that could hint for trouble, but after what had happened his identity had been uncovered shockingly fast.
Rajesh Barjar had been equally as busy, trying mostly to put out metaphorical fires (and a few literal ones) as he attempted to explain to the rest of Jaipur’s ruling family why his daughter was able to defeat a monster that had killed over a dozen policemen, and eaten several of them whole.
There was no escaping or hiding this one. It was all out in the open now. Nobody could miss something like that. There had even been news interviews with the headmistress of the Heatherford Girl's Academy of Boston (who apparently was hoping to pressure Rajesh into footing the bill for the renovations after Nelen’s defeat of The Red Lady,) a manager of a McDonald’s in Provo Utah (who had sworn blind that she’d never met him and that any questions regarding a malfunctioning McFlurry machine should be directed to McDonald’s legal department,) and a police chief in Canon City Colorado (who had bluntly stated ‘no comment’ before locking his office door.)
Aisha’s manager had some very pointed questions for her as to how the hell she wound up in India, though apparently the top hat she had was giving them some ideas for their next clothing line so it wasn’t all bad for her. Natasha, Stephy, and Sammi had all vanished as soon as the cameras started going off so people barely got glimpses of them. Drusilla had already gotten a following on social media (turns out a lot of people are into large women, but in her case this mostly amused her,) but as for Arja and Simoni.
Well, they weren’t there.
After all that’d happened, they decided that a vacation was exactly what was needed, and if there was one place reporters wouldn’t be able to track them down it was somewhere that was outside of reality as they knew it.
So the day after all this began they decided to go visit Akul and the rest of the vanara… until they got the all clear to come back once things had calmed down.
Vanara Village, the Supernatural Realm
It didn’t really have a proper name, the Vanara all knew what and where it was, so why bother. They mostly just called it ‘home’ and left it at that.
The two girls were back in Mirza’s kitchen, each having a lovely bowl of chicken curry and naan with extra rice and recounting the story for the vanara woman.
“A manticore… well well, you two have come quite a long way. I doubt even Elder Akul could have handled one of those by himself.” she chuckled as she poured them another cup of chai tea.
Arja sighed, “Yeah, but it would have been nice if we’d thought to lure it out of the city before we went all in…” she shrugged, scooping up some of the curry onto her naan and gulping it down.
Simoni nodded, “I mean… we couldn’t really. That thing wasn’t playing around this time. Whoever its master was had clearly lost control of it. No supernatural would willingly let something run wild in a major city like that. I’m betting every vampire elder, archmage, and whatever is about ready to shit after that. Everyone is just asking ‘am I going to get found out next?’”
Mirza pursed her lips, “Mmm, yes that is a major problem. I know your grandfather was beside himself with worry when he heard about what had happened.” she nodded to Arja, “Last I heard all of our family in Jaipur is ready to abandon the city and make for the temple at a moment’s notice if we need to. With the manticore being this bold we can’t be certain that the naga won’t throw caution to the wind now that it’s all out in the open.”
Simoni frowned, “The worst part is we have no idea who its master is! I know the first time we fought it I heard a voice that sounded like a naga’s, but I can’t be certain… Mirza, do you have any ideas?” she asked.
The vanara woman shrugged her shoulders, “Nope. I’m no historian girls, just a woman who likes cooking. I keep to my kitchen and let Elder Akul worry about such matters.” she replied. “I prefer it that way, spices don’t start crises unless I put too many on a curry… and even then its quickly fixed.”
The two nodded, then finished up their meals and left the eatery, heading through the village towards the temple in the center where Akul spent his days. As the walked through town they did notice more looks than normal, though these were more admiration than anything. After all, a manticore was a horrible foe. To defeat one was quite the feat. The vanara would be talking about this for generations to come, that was certain.
The two entered the temple and approached the throne room where, as he often did, sat Arja’s grandfather. The massive ape-man examining a historical text with one face as his other face took careful notes as, of course, the man had two faces. One on either side of his head. He had been alive for quite some years, and such things happened to the enlightened of India’s supernatural community.
He paused as he heard them enter, then smiled, “Ah, girls… welcome back.” he nodded, putting down the tome.
“Hi grandpa.” replied Arja, smiling back at him, though it was a strained smile. The past few weeks had been difficult for them all. “Any luck yet?” she asked.
He sighed and shook his head, “I am afraid not… there are precious few who could ever have hoped to control a monster such as a manticore, and of those less than a dozen could have survived to the present day.” he frowned. “Even then, none of them would have a reason to hold specific enmity towards us that I know of…”
As they talked however a man arrived at the edge of the village. Several vanara paused and looked at this newcomer, then three of them raised weapons and demanded they leave at once. The newcomer gave them a withering look, then walked past them with their hands folded behind their back as if they were nothing more than an animal screeching at them.
Back in the temple Simoni shrugged, “Well… what if one of the other ones could have survived somehow? I mean, they may have just hidden away, or gone into some sort of hibernation or something.”
Akul stroked his left chin, frowning. “It is not… impossible, but unlikely still.” he replied.
Outside more of the vanara came rushing from their homes as cries of alarm went up, the newcomer walking casually towards the temple as if he was simply taking a Sunday afternoon stroll.
One vanara, braver than the others, dove towards him with a spear and without looking the newcomer spun, slammed their fist into their face, and sent them flying into a nearby house with a sickening crunch, then shook their hand clean and sniffed in annoyance before continuing along his path.
Arja scowled, “But who are they? All we know is this thing has a master that might be a naga… ugh!” she threw up her arms, “They know us! They know all about what we can do! They even knew about Dawn’s tricks but we know NOTHING about them except they’re powerful and one MIGHT be a naga!” she shouted in frustration.
Simoni nodded, “Yeah… we don’t even know why they’re after us…” she added, then paused as she had a worrying thought, “Arja… the only reason we’ve got for anyone to be after us right now would be that we helped hide Rama’s Arrow… do you think…” she glanced towards her… then suddenly a young vanara guardsman burst into the temple.
“ELDER AKUL! We have an intruder in the village! A powerful raksha-…” he began, then a hand closed around his throat and threw him outside of the temple.
“I can announce myself, thank you.” came a cultured voice in a very old dialect of Sanskrit.
Akul rose from his throne, his eyes widening as, into the temple, walked a man in the garb of an ancient Indian maharajah. He had long glossy black hair tied into a braid down his back and a trimmed mustache and beard. He also had deep blue skin and shining yellow eyes… clearly not human at all.
“Who are you?” Akul demanded, “How dare you intrude upon our home! Begone at once rakshasa!” he demanded.
The rakshasa frowned, “So discourteous, behave yourself vanara or I will be forced to correct you.” he scolded.
Arja’s eyes bulged, the girl shifting into her vanara form as she snarled at him. “Don’t you talk to my grandfather that way! You’re in our home and we outnumber you easily! What makes you think you’ll be leaving here alive?” she demanded.
The rakshasa sniffed, “You truly do not know who I am, do you?” he sighed, “I suppose it has been quite some time since I last walked upon this world. Even the spawn of Hanuman no longer recognize me…” he shook his head, “Very well, very well… I shall educate you children.”
He stood, smirking at them, “Kneel and recognize your better, monkeys! Before you stands none other than the son of the true king of Lanka! Heir to the great and powerful King Ravana whose austerities were so grand that even Shiva was forced to acquiesce to his demands!” he laughed as Simoni looked around. Arja had frozen on the spot, all the bravado gone from her face as even Akul took a step backwards in shock.
“I am Prince Indrajit. Conqueror of the devas…” he grinned at Arja and Akul, “… and who, in a single day, slew over six hundred million of your kin, nearly destroying the line of Hanuman single-handedly. To me, you are nothing but animals.”
Arja stared at him, her eyes wide. “No… you’re gone. Lakshmana killed you!” she insisted. “He beheaded you with Anjalikastra! You’re gone!”
Indrajit chuckled, “So that is what they told you…” he shook his head, “No, he did not use that weapon. He used a sword… one that was not of the deva, or of India itself. It was a great giant blade… a…” he paused, thinking, “I believe a claymore is the term the westerners use for them…” he nodded.
Simoni felt a chill go down her back, “… no…” she shook her head.
“Yes indeed, a claymore. At least that’s what his mortal allies saw. I saw a great gaping hole in the world… as if the air itself was ripped apart, leading to nothing but blackness.” sneered the Rakshasa.
Arja felt her heart catch in her chest, the girl glancing at Simoni, then back at Indrajit. They knew of only one sword like that… and they had both had a hand in its destruction.
“After my return I had my servants track down any information they could on such a sword. Apparently it was made in what is now called the ‘United Kingdom.’ Why, I even learned it had a name. I am not familiar with the tongue, but I believe it was called…” he continued, smiling as he drew the moment out.
“No…” whispered Arja, “We didn’t… that… there’s no way…” she was breathing fast now, her eyes wide with horror.
“… I believe it is pronounced… ‘Claiomh Dorcadas.’” he finished, watching them curiously.
Simoni felt her legs tremble. She felt her stomach churning.
“If it were up to me, I’d shatter as many as I could… but… even then… if there was something like Ravana in one… I mean, we can’t know until it’s broken.”
That was what she’d said to Arja when they were almost to the Temple of Rama to deliver the arrow, before Akuru had ambushed them. They couldn’t know until it was broken.
Now they did know, there was something like Ravana in Claomh Dorcadas.
HIS SON.
Indrajit chuckled at their clear distress, “Truly, I must thank you two children. Knowingly or not, you freed me! What is more, knowing what my prison was I learned the truth of my father’s defeat! So, I am here today to offer you terms for an honorable surrender.” he nodded, “Thus are my terms. You will stand aside and not attempt to stop me from retrieving the Arrow of Rama. In exchange, your people may live… for now.”
Arja was breathing so hard she was on the verge of hyperventilating, her eyes wide and wild. This wasn’t as bad as Ravana’s return, but it was damn close to it! What was worse, he had been trapped within Claiomh Dorcadas! This was her fault!
“A-and… if we refuse?” she managed to gasp out.
Indrajit chuckled, as if enjoying a personal joke, then he fixed Arja with a glare as his expression became deadly serious. “Then Jaipur will burn.” he snarled, “I have spent the last several months rallying the rakshasa to my banner once more, and the naga as well. I command a veritable army once again. If you attempt to stop me, my forces will besiege the city and utterly erase it.” he spat. “None will survive, mortal or otherwise. No buildings will be left standing. We will reduce the city to rubble and salt the land it stood on. Make no mistake, scion of Hanuman. What I do now I do because honor demands it. Otherwise, you would not be alive.”
Simoni shook her head, trying to focus past her shock, “It was you. You sent the manticore, didn’t you?” she demanded.
Indrajit shrugged, “A useful beast for testing your abilities, but a troublesome one. It got so frustrated with those foreign warriors sent to stop it that it refused to listen to me and attacked Jaipur alone. Really, you have my gratitude for putting it down. A pet that refuses to listen to its master does not deserve to live.”
Indrajit shook his head in disappointment, then straightened up and clapped his hands, “Ah, but I must be off. Many things to do to prepare for my father’s return. Remember, if you try to prevent this all those you know and love will pay the price for your actions scion of Hanuman.” he nodded, the rakshasa prince turning and leaving as casually as he came in… only to find a mob of vanara waiting outside, weapons drawn.
Indrajit looked around, making an annoyed tsking sound, then flexed his hands… but before anyone could act Akul emerged behind him and called out, “STAND DOWN! ALL OF YOU!” in a loud booming voice.
The vanara looked at him in confusion, but Elder Akul had said it… so hesitantly they lowered their weapons and stepped back, making a path for Indrajit.
The prince chuckled, “Listen to your leader little monkeys. As much as I would enjoy the exercise, I am very busy today.” he nodded, walking to the edge of the plateau where the city stood, then jumping off. It was a fall that would kill most people, but clearly this was not most people.
Simoni stood next to Akul, watching him leave… then she heard Arja coughing behind her, then retching.
The vanara was on her knees, the stress and shock of what had just happened causing her to throw up the curry they had just eaten onto the floor of the temple. She knelt there next to the puddle, tears streaming down her cheeks.
“Arja!” called Simoni, rushing over to her and sitting next to her as the vanara curled up into a ball, wrapping her arms tight around her legs and burying her face in them.
“This is our fault Simoni… we broke Claiomh Dorcadas… we set him free… this is all our fault…” she whispered.
“Arja, yeah we did… but we can still stop him! We can make it right!” she nodded, putting her hand on the vanara’s shoulder.
Arja shook her head, “No, no we can’t… if Rama and Lakshmana had to use mundane blades to defeat them, what chance do we have? India, maybe the entire world is doomed… and it’s our fault!” she moaned out, shuddering as the weight of it all settled on her like a shroud.
Through the jungle below, Indrajit strode back to his base of operations in the Supernatural World, a smile of accomplishment on his face. He could have simply killed her, yes, but this was so much more satisfying. He had seen her face, he had heard the shaking in her voice.
Let Hanuman’s heir live to see their King’s ultimate failure and the destruction of all they held dear. Arja could not stand against him now. He didn’t need to break the vanara girl’s body, he had already broken her spirit.
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The Battle of Boston Harbour: a brief outline
The fight between HMS Shannon and USS Chesapeake went down in history as one of the greatest naval battles of all time, but really it was over just as quickly as it began. The duration of the battle differs depending on one’s sources, though it’s generally believed it lasted between 11 and 15 minutes long. Here is a small timeline of what happened aboard the vessels on the 1st of June, 1813:
In starting, it is important to acknowledge that Captain Broke was extremely committed to the training and competence of his crew. Shannons were trained on the guns 6 days a week until they were able to fire three rounds a minute. This is part of what gave them an advantage over the Chesapeakes- the latter crew were not as prepared for battle, at least not an exchange of broadsides. They almost genuinely never knew what hit them.
Broke wishes to attempt the capture of one more American ship before the Shannon departs Massachusetts, she’s badly wounded and running low on provisions. He pens a letter to Captain Lawrence expressing his desire for their ships to meet, Lawrence never receives this letter. Eventually, around half past 5, Chesapeake leaves Boston Harbour and sails out to meet Shannon, who’d been eagerly awaiting her company. It’s a minute to 6 o’clock in the evening.
Shannon opens fire The first shot fired in the battle comes under the permission of Second Lieutenant Provo Wallis; captain of the fourteenth maindeck gun Billy Mindham fires his gun and the volley of broadsides commences.
Chesapeake wounded It would not be unfair to say that Chesapeake did not fare well in this first round of broadsides- not only had Lawrence been shot by one of the Shannon’s Marines, she’d lost her jib-sheets and tiller ropes, her wheel had been broken, and because of her critical condition paired with her advantage of the weather gauge, she luffed into Shannon’s anchor and became stuck. This was a prime opportunity for Broke to seize the chance to board her and engage the Chesapeakes in hand-to-hand combat.
Boarding Chesapeake, more casualties The crew of the Chesapeake made a dangerous mistake- they flinch from their guns. Shannon now has an even greater advantage. “Follow me who can!” The famous battle cry of Captain Broke as he crossed the gangway onto Chesapeake’s deck. Several of his faithful crew followed him over, including First Lieutenant George Watt. Broke was engaged in combat with three Chesapeakes, two of whom severely wounded his skull, leaving his brain exposed (Broke survived but never accepted an active command later on). Lieutenant Watts was attempting to raise the British colours on the American ship when he noticed a mistake- the flag was positioned below the American colours. He scarcely had time to fix his error when he was pierced through the chest by grapeshot.
Marine shot, Chesapeakes surrender The last words of Captain Lawrence were the famous “don’t give up the ship!” Of course, we know his crew did exactly that. Chesapeake’s crew had dispersed from her maindeck and were driven belowdecks with a metal grating to cover them. With a Marine standing guard over the grating, one of the confined crew fired a shot at him and killed the Marine instantly. Noticing this, the Shannons fired into the Americans in an angry rain of musket balls and, fatigued, her Lieutenant Falkiner shouted at the Americans that if they did not send up the man who killed their Marine, he would put them to death one by one.
Shannon has won, the battle is over within 15 minutes. 96 men are killed, 156 wounded.
Shannon sails back to Halifax under the command of Second Lieutenant Provo Wallis, arriving on the morning of 6th June to jubilant crowds and fanfare. Her presence in the city is very much felt today, the Battle of Boston Harbour instills a sense of folkloric pride in the hearts of many a Haligonian. And to think, it was over just as it had started.
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Black associate deputy appointed to Office of African Nova Scotian Affairs
A well-known educational administrator has been added to the ministerial staff at the Office of Nova Scotian Affairs after criticism about the lack of any Black people in the office's key roles.
Premier Tim Houston said Wednesday that Dwayne Provo will serve as associate deputy minister, calling him a "quality person" for whom he has a lot of respect.
"We want that office to be effective, and I have great confidence in Dwayne," he told reporters.
Houston has drawn fire since he appointed Pat Dunn, who is white, as minister for the office after the Progressive Conservatives won the Aug. 17 election without electing any Black candidates. Critics suggested a minister could have been appointed from outside the Tory caucus, and they also objected to the removal of Kesa Munroe-Anderson, who is Black, as a deputy minister in the office.
Last week, Houston said his government was re-examining its decision to appoint a new deputy minister who is not Black, but he now says Provo's appointment fulfils "the spirit" of what representatives from a coalition of African Nova Scotian community groups sought in a meeting two weeks ago.
He said Provo will act more as a CEO in his new role.
"It was one of their asks ... that there be somebody in that role that understands the community and is respected in the community, and I believe that person is Dwayne," Houston said.
Provo's appointment took effect on Oct. 7. He had previously worked in the province's Education Department, where he was an adviser on issues facing Black students.
In an interview Wednesday, Provo said he was excited by his new appointment.
"It's a real opportunity to do some things for the African Nova Scotian community," he said. "I think one of the things is just making sure there is a voice that's reflective ... of our historic Black communities."
Provo said it will also be important to ensure that there is ongoing community engagement with the office.
Formerly a star defensive back in football at Saint Mary's University in Halifax, Provo is best known for a pro career that saw a brief stint with the New England Patriots before eight years in the CFL. He also ran twice for the provincial Progressive Conservatives but wasn't elected.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 13, 2021.
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/2Xa1Xl3
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Choosing to Vote is Good. Here’s How it Works.
So you’re excited to vote out Trump’s friends this November? Good.
But … maybe you’re a little confused or overwhelmed. Maybe you haven’t realized it yet and won’t know what to do come November 6. That’s less good. Completely understandable, because it is complicated and technical. But as someone with nearly two decades’ experience voting, volunteering with voter advocacy groups, and one miserable stint working as a paid poll registrar, I’m here to help.
(Obviously this is for my American friends. Everyone else, feel free to scroll along!)
(Also obviously, America is huge and ridiculously complicated, and your experience may differ from state to state. Hopefully this will still be helpful.)
(1) Am I registered?
In the US you need to be on the voter rolls before you can vote. It’s actually pretty straightforward, but you do need to do it before election day. You’ll need to feel out a registration form, either by printing and mailing it in, completing it in person at your board of elections or with one of the groups you sometimes see on the street registering voters.
In theory you only need to register once, unless you change your name or address. But governments aren’t perfect and sometimes they’re downright tricksy. It’s a good idea to check before each election to make sure you’re still properly registered.
(True story: one year another voter with a similar name moved out of state and re-registered there, and my local board of elections de-registered me by mistake. They fixed it, of course, but that was much easier because I wasn’t trying to address the problem with an overworked and undertrained staff on election day.)
(Equally true: many governments are deregistering lots of people they suspect are felons (which impacts racial minorities more than whites), have name mismatches between their registrations and other government records (which impacts people with multiple names like Hispanics more than those with more common names by Anglo standards), those who move around to multiple addresses or go long periods without a set address (which impacts both the homeless and younger voters less likely to own a home), or even just those who simply haven’t voted in several elections. None of this is okay. None of it is the voter’s fault. But it’s also all easier to fix when you’re not having to address it on election day.)
Check if you’re registered here.
(2) Where do you vote?
Most people vote at polling locations, usually largeish buildings that aren’t owned by private people or companies. Schools, fire departments, and churches seem popular places in my experience. You should receive the address of a polling place you’re registered with in the weeks before the election. Expect long delays, particularly if you’re voting at peak hours (before/after work and lunchtime).
Most states also let you vote at the county board of elections in the weeks leading up to the election. Some are only open in standard business hours (Mon-Fri 9-5), though some have evening or weekend availability. There’s often less wait, though again this depends a lot on when you go in.
Finally, most states allow mail-in (absentee) ballots. You need to request a ballot several weeks before the election, which they will mail to you and you should in turn mail back completed. Some states only allow this for voters who can’t vote in person, for example people traveling out of state on election day or those with physical or mental conditions that make it difficult to vote in person.
Find out more on your state’s regulations for early voting here, or absentee ballots here.
(3) What should I bring with me?
Besides a good book? ;-)
You’ll probably need some kind of ID. States vary: some have really stringent laws and demand a driver’s license or the non-license official photo IDs issued by the DMV. Others take less official photo IDs (like school IDs and benefit cards), and some just need proof you live at your address like a utility bill or pay stub. More details state by state here.
Also, bring your voter registration card if you have it. You should receive it by mail before the election. Technically not required, but having it proves you’re in the right place, which can make the precinct staff more motivated to help you, in my experience.
(4) Who should you vote for?
Obviously that’s your decision. But if you’re not going to vote straight-ticket for whomever your party nominated (good!), you should probably familiarize yourself with the different candidates. Ballotpedia has a neat tool where you enter your zip code and can see the candidate for each race in your county, along with link to their biographies, voting history, policy positions, and campaign supporters. ,
Many states (not all) also have ballot initiatives, where voters can vote directly on legislative proposals. Again, the key is to know what you’re voting for or against. See Ballotpedia’s list of initiatives on the ballot this November.
(5) What if they don’t let you vote?
Say you do everything right: you register, you turn up at the right place within the proper hours with the right ID, And you’re still not allowed to vote for whatever reason.
Sometimes administrative errors happen. Remember you’re working with staff who received fairly minimal training for a single day’s work, and have been dealing with (perhaps justifiably) irate people all day. Be as nice as you can without sacrificing your rights. Ask them to check the voting rolls again, and if they still can’t find you ask to cast a provisional ballot. They’ll forward it to the Board of Elections, who will count it once they confirm you actually should have been allowed to vote.
Sometimes it seems more sinister, though. If you think you’re being bullied or if the lines are excessively long or for whatever reason you think they’re purposefully trying to keep you from voting... still be as nice as you can without sacrificing your rights. Get them to check again for your name and file a provo. But then find someone helping monitor the election -- they’ll either be in the precinct, or on the sidewalk a little way from the polling place -- and tell them your problem. They may be able to help, and if they can’t help you in that moment, they’ll certainly report the problem so appropriate legal action can be taken if there’s a trend.
If all else fails, call 866-OUR-VOTE. They’re staffed by election lawyers who work to address these issues that keep you from voting, and really want to hear about your problem.
(Another true story. In 2014 we had a poll registrar – the person who verified voters were in the right place and gave them their ballots – who turned several voters away because their IDs didn’t match the names they were registered under. We’re talking a difference in a diacritical, or where they had two last names on the ID but only one on the voting rolls. My state’s law allows for minor variance as long as the voter is “identifiable” as the person in the ID; it doesn’t need to be an exact match, but apparently the girl registering voters didn’t know this.
(I went in, respectfully identified myself, pulled up the appropriate regs on my phone, and convinced the registrar and her supervisor to let the two ladies I still had on hand to vote using regular ballots. I don’t doubt this worker was just frustrated and under-trained, but it did help I knew who to complain to!)
So in closing:
I jest, of course. Keep it legal. But do vote.
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God bless our firefighters!
They have been coming from all over the country to help battle the Thomas Fire. It’s the fifth largest fire in California history, and it’s still growing. As of 12.13.17, it has consumed 137,500 acres, with 25% containment. This is what they face:
I’m writing this with tears in my eyes. I live in Santa Barbara, about a mile from a mandatory evacuation area for the Thomas Fire. I’ve barely left my home the past week because the sky is raining ashes, and it’s been so smoky I couldn’t see the sky. I was grateful to see a bit of blue skies this morning.
I left to drive a friend to work (because no one should be walking in these conditions), and when I came to a stop sign I watched a virtual convoy of fire vehicles drive by. There must have been at least a dozen. Many were from places I didn’t recognize, including Marshall. I googled it and saw Marshall cities in Michigan, Missouri, and Texas. I saw another truck from Provo, Utah.
At one point the fire was consuming an acre a second. In the beginning, the crews were stretched so thin that some were working 48-hour shifts. We now have 7,000 firefighters working this fire.
Some of these brave men and women have come halfway across the country to help people they’ve never met. They are risking their lives and their health, and leaving their families at a time when they could be preparing for the holidays.
It’s so easy to take our blessings for granted. I do not want to be that person. I want to express my gratitude to firefighters and first responders everywhere. Thank you for being there, and for risking everything.
Photo Credit: Mike Eliason, John Palminteri, Ventura County Fire Department
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4 Feb 2019 - THAT YE MAY STAND BLAMELESS BEFORE GOD AT THE LAST DAY
My sincerest apologies for not emailing last Monday. I was traveling from the Provo MTC to the Colorado Springs mission!! I arrived around 4pm with a group of other missionaries and was assigned the area I will be serving in for the next 6 or more weeks. There is a chunk of New Mexico included in the CO Springs mission, and that's where I was assigned to serve! I am in a little town called Raton. SO STOKED. It was my dream to serve in NM ever since I took a look at the mission boundaries. My last week at the MTC was awesome. As a lot of you know, I wasn't stoked to be spending an extra week there while all my other district mates departed for their mission fields. Nevertheless! The Lord make it all awesome. I got put into a new district for my remaining week, and they took me in and treated me like family. Instant friends. We had a blast learning together that last week. Pictures are included below. It was sad to leave them all, but we are all now in different parts of North America (some in Canada, some in South Carolina, and me here in NM) beginning our service to the Lord! Coming to Raton was such a pretty roadtrip! My new companion, Sister Hekking, and I drove from the Springs all the way across the border to the Land of Enchantment! I am thankful to be here because while there is snow and not so nice temperatures in CO, the sun is out and the degrees are high here in NM! I have been wearing my cute sandals (unless you are Emma Gaush, then they are "Mexican man shoes") and my curls have been flowing free in the dry desert wind! I love it here. We live up by the side of the mountain in town next to a State Trooper (so don't worry, Mom, I am safe despite some drug and gang problems in town). Raton used to be a booming mining town and now it is losing its life (and people). Good thing the Sister missionaries are in town (there haven't been Sisters here for a while)! I am determined to spruce this place up with my personality and the light of the gospel of Jesus Christ!! WOOHOO SO PUMPED. We gonna get this town up and bumpin again!! When you are called to do the Lord's work, you DO IT. Obedience and diligence is how you stand blameless before God. Some things that have occurred since we came here: -- An antelope straight chased our car down the road for a whole mile. I have never seen an antelope before and I wanted to get close, but Sister Hekking was afraid it was rabid so she ordered me to get in the car. -- We almost perished from a fire. No worries. One of the burners on our stove went up in flames while we were cooking macaroni one day. It's all good now thanks to my fire-fighting skillz, the wonderful ventilation in our house, and our oscillating fan. The Spirit of God like a fire is burning, I guess. -- Since this area of NM is straight BEAUTIFUL, we have been exploring. There are old rodeo grounds, lakes, haunted hotels, some great cemeteries (because you know ya girl loves a good cemetery), mountains, ranches, and mesas! Also, there is a volcano in my area, so that will be a Monday activity for sure. God knows me so well and knew I would just THRIVE in NM. Land of my Native ancestors. That's the other thing: there are 3 groups of people here: Gringos, Natives, and Hispanics. So I fit right in, haha. I read a beautiful scripture here that defines my experience coming to NM. It's in the Doctrine & Covenants (revelation from God given to the prophet Joseph Smith and then later compiled into a book of scripture). Section 88 verses 45-47 reads: "The earth rolls upon her wings, and the sun giveth his light by day, and the moon giveth her light by night, and the stars also give their light, as they roll upon their wings in their glory, in the midst of the power of God. Unto what shall I liken these kingdoms, that ye may understand? Behold, all these are kingdoms, and any man who hath seen any or the least of these hath seen God moving in his majesty and power." That's straight POETRY. I love it. If you have seen and experienced the earth, you have witnessed the power and reality of God. Holy moly ain't that the truth. I am so grateful for this earth that my Heavenly Father created for me!! Lots of pictures of His creations in NM below!! I love you all! Take care this week! -- Sister Leah Gaush
Raton, NM Pictures from the planet of MARS:
1. Me n my CUTE AS HECK MTC companions
2. Some members of my second district at the MTC. What gems. What an album cover.
3. Matching hair-dos with the MTC companions. If an assassin was after one of us, he'd end up taking us all out on accident.
4. NM land pt. 1
5. NM land pt. 2
6. NM sunset feat. our church building
7. Me n Sister Hekking, my new companion!! Typical hair for me.
8. Embracing the wildnerness !
9. Typical pretty house. *Heart eyes*
10. Oh wow artsy feat. my new hand-me-down dress from a previous Sister Missionary
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In Utah, members of a militia claim their presence deters protesters from becoming violent and destroying the stateThe Utah Citizens’ Alarm is only a month old, and yet it already boasts 15,000-plus members.The citizen militia’s recruits wear military fatigues and carry assault rifles. Their short-term goal, they say, is to act as a physical presence of intimidation to deter protesters from becoming violent and destroying the state of Utah. Their long-term goal: to arm and prepare the state of Utah against underground movements they believe will incite civil war.The group was conceived in reaction to a Black Lives Matter protest against police brutality organized by different groups in Provo, Utah, on 29 June. That day, a white protester pulled out a gun and shot another white man, who was not protesting but driving his vehicle into the protest route. Two shots were fired, and one hit the driver in the arm. Protesters claim the shooting was in self-defence because the driver was hitting marchers; the police found this claim to be unsubstantiated.When Casey Robertson, 47, watched a video of the incident, he felt outraged that this could happen in his “little town of Provo”. He posted on his Facebook page and a local yard sale page that “protesters descended on downtown Provo and terrorized citizens and SHOTS WERE FIRED.” He explained that Insurgence, one of the organizing group, was planning another protest for the next night and he rallied “concerned citizens” to come together, armed and ready to do their part in protecting downtown businesses.This was a call to arms. Utah Citizens’ Alarm was born.“I was like, ‘We need to stand together as citizens and go down there and show these people that we’re not going to allow violence, and that we are not going to allow these anarchist violent groups to tear down Provo,” Robertson told the Guardian. “It’s not going to happen without a fight.’”Utah Citizens’ Alarm has since organized regular military-style trainings for its members. Robertson says he has been tipped off “by secret sources within the government and law enforcement” that underground organizations like antifa are being funded by Isis, and are using groups like BLM to wreak havoc in the community to destroy American cities and ideals. Even if none of these theories stand up to scrutiny, he is dead set on not letting it happen.Robertson was born and raised in Provo. His dad was a Provo police officer and his mother a police dispatcher. He has voted both sides of the political aisle – he voted for Clinton and Obama, although he now considers himself a conservative. To him, this is not about politics, but good and evil, and he is ready to die for this cause.“My biggest fear, probably, is my children being brought up and having to grow up in a country that has completely lost its freedom, and that is under attack, and that is turning into this cesspool of violence and chaos,” he said. “Our enemy is now within, and that’s really scary to me.”This already has a chilling effect on protests: organizers have begun cancelling protests out of fear of Utah Citizens’ Alarm coming and escalating the already heated emotions. So far, militia members remain unchallenged, using their second amendment rights to openly bear arms in public throughout the state. ‘We are here to protect the community’That same Black Lives Matter protest that inspired Robertson’s fear was originally planned as a pro-police event in downtown Provo. John Sullivan, 26, the founder of Insurgence USA, a group for racial justice and police reform, organized a counter-protest alongside several other organizers. Protesters were to meet at the Provo police station at 6.30pm that night.Sullivan, one of the few black men organizing for racial justice in Utah, is not from Provo but Sandy, a suburb of Salt Lake City. Provo is a hyper-religious Latter-day Saint college town located 45 miles south of Salt Lake City. The city is made up of about 110,000 people, 88% white, 16.6% Hispanic, and less than 1% black. Local quirks include a strong second amendment culture, strong self-reliant groups, end of world preppers, a booming music scene and a charming Center Street that has at least three ice cream parlors and only recently got its first coffee shop, as the predominant demography does not drink coffee for religious purposes.The Black Lives Matter protesters started to march. They yelled “Whose streets? Our streets!” at drivers and lingered in front of cars, some of which started plowing through the crowd, claiming protesters had surrounded them and would not let them leave. (Videos show this was not the case.)Brian DeLong, a philosophy student at Utah Valley University, was grabbing a coffee when he saw protesters pass by. He joined in the march. At the intersection of University Avenue and Center Street, he was hit by a silver Excursion going southbound and immediately heard two gunshots, one after the other. DeLong bounced off the car and realized about five other people had also been hit. The driver frantically drove off.Nine minutes later, an ambulance appeared on the scene. The police did not come, and only appeared in full riot gear at 9.40pm when protesters made it back to the front of the police station.Drivers driving into protesters resulting in people shooting guns is becoming more frequent. On July 25, an Austin motorist drove into a crowd and fatally shot a protester. On the same night, another driver drove into protesters in Aurora, Colorado – except it was a protester who took out his gun and ended up shooting two fellow protesters.After the Provo protest, a policeman told Josianne Petit, 34, a criminal defense paralegal and founder of Mama & Papa Panthers, an organization dedicated to helping parents of all races in raising black children, that the police were inside watching the whole protest on Facebook Live. She said: “I felt fundamentally betrayed. I had worked with Provo PD extensively prior to that protest and I thought I had a good working relationship with them, but to hear the complete disregard they had for the lives of protesters was alarming to me, but also devastating.”Sullivan, the organizer, was not prepared for what transpired, nor did he know that anyone had a gun on his side of the protest. He created another Facebook event to hold a protest two days later in response.On that day, the two sides stood facing each other. The protesters carried posters; the Utah Citizens’ Alarm carried assault rifles. The protesters wore black; the paramilitia wore American flags. Both groups wore masks. On the west side, it was to protect themselves from the coronavirus. On the east side, masks were a protection from unwanted media attention.One young man carrying an assault rifle and two magazines of ammunition, with his face completely covered, pointed at the protesters and said: “What they have done is straight out of the communist manifesto … they say that your political beliefs are now your identity and, if somebody’s against your identity, they can justify whatever they do against you because they’re now repressing you for not agreeing with you.”He added: “Not everybody over there but the more extremists will agree with that. Black Lives Matter, as an organization, receives money from people who want to see violence happen.”Another young man walked over and said: “They hate America. They say they want to change America, that’s un-American.”The BLM protesters were authorized to march in the street. Utah Citizens’ Alarm was permitted to march on the sidewalks, guarding the storefronts from the protesters. About 250 policemen were brought in, as well as at least four snipers who stood on the roof of the Nu Skin building, a ten-storey building next to the Mormon temple.One police officer from Springville, a town just south of Provo, said he trusted 99.9% of the men and women with the guns, and said: “Those men and women would be the first people to take a bullet for any of the protesters there.”At the end of the march, Utah Citizens’ Alarm members came to the megaphone and repeated the Springville police officer’s line: “We are here to protect the community. We would be the first to take a bullet for each and every one of you.”Josey Gardner, 25, a protester and EMT studying English at BYU, asked: “Whose bullets are they protecting us from? They are the only ones with guns.” A chilling effect on free speechUtah Citizens’ Alarm is now organized into a pseudo-militia under the guidance of ex-military and ex-law enforcement on their newly formed board of advisers. They want Utah to be fully prepared for the “civil war” instigated by underground, militant forces.The group trains tirelessly. When on site, members are advised to move in groups of three and no less, because they have been told by informants on the inside that antifa attacks single out the strongest members in vulnerable situations. They have escape plans at every site, and promote a firm obedience to the local police, including when asked by them not to come to a protest.(Provo police chief Rich Ferguson made a statement that the Provo police have no relationship with the Utah Citizens’ Alarm, which Sergeant Nisha King, head of the Provo police department’s public information team, verified. )Meanwhile, militia members have now been to almost every protest on the Wasatch Front. They come to protests throughout the state with anywhere between 30 to 1,000 members in full uniform (sometimes homemade, sometimes military-grade), some in bulletproof vests, and openly carrying ARs. They silently stand in the background and observe, always on guard believing they may be called upon to act quickly if something goes wrong.A protest in Taylorsville was cancelled because too many protesters felt the risk was not worth being there. Robertson took this as a win.Jason Stevens, of Utah’s American Civil Liberties Union, stressed the importance of the historical context in what happened in the civil rights movement of the 1960s when armed groups, militias, local chapters of the Ku Klux Klan, white citizens councils, organizations both official and unofficial took it upon themselves to defend what they saw as their rights and property with violent and systemic intimidation and threats to African Americans and others in those areas.“I am not saying that is what is happening here. But with context, if you are a protester and you see groups like this showing up at your protest, that’s got to be in the back of your mind, this history of intimidation and threats.”Outside of Utah, these threats are present and real for protesters. In Omak, Washington, small civilian militias are forming to threaten protesters. In New Mexico, there is another civilian militia group that call themselves the New Mexico Civil Guard reacting to rioting and looting.In Portland, the threats to free speech and the right to protest are coming from the federal government, which has deployed unidentified agents to quell protests by forcibly grabbing protesters and taking them away in unidentified vehicles.BLM-adjacent groups held a “Stop Kidnapping Protesters” event in Salt Lake City on 22 July, in reference to what took place in Portland. Robertson and his team came in full garb and made a live video. Robertson said: “That’s the name of the protest – ‘Stop kidnapping protesters’. My boy over here translated it as ‘stop arresting criminals’. The awesome thing is these people that are out creating chaos and committing crimes, they are being watched. Law enforcement finally started to go around and pick them up and arrest them. I am all for it.”Additionally, lines between the second and first amendment are complicated, especially as open-carry laws in Utah make it legal for groups of heavily armed individuals to gather in places where the first amendment is being honored, such as protests.“If the right to bear arms is overriding the right to free speech, that may be cause for concern,” said Dr RonNell Andersen Jones, a law professor at the University of Utah. “Our constitutional doctrine hasn’t yet had the chance to really tussle with the question of what the presence of guns does to a free speech event. Short of more overt threats of violence, we usually protect protesters with guns in the same ways we protect protesters without them. But if the express goal of the armed individuals is to intimidate people who might otherwise share their views, that’s especially troubling.”In response to Utah Citizens’ Alarm, Utah protesters are now arming themselves. John Sullivan of Insurgence USA held his first armed protest on 22 July at the Utah state capitol, carrying an AR-15 and a magazine of ammo. He is encouraging Insurgence USA protesters to purchase guns so they can protect themselves if there is violence.“Basically, nobody in our group owns a gun except for me; nobody was planning on ever shooting anyone. So the fact that I bought a bulletproof vest and more magazines and our people are buying guns should say a lot. It shouldn’t be that way.”Petit, who also organizes alongside BLM and Insurgence USA, has recruited ex-military to train and arm her protesters, because she feels the threat is real as long as Utah Citizens’ Alarm is showing up.“The only way forward is to make sure we are prepared, because at this point the options the only options available to us are when things go crazy we lie down and die, or we fight back.“And I’m sorry, I’m not lying down for anybody.”
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines https://ift.tt/2CTYBsl
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In Utah, members of a militia claim their presence deters protesters from becoming violent and destroying the stateThe Utah Citizens’ Alarm is only a month old, and yet it already boasts 15,000-plus members.The citizen militia’s recruits wear military fatigues and carry assault rifles. Their short-term goal, they say, is to act as a physical presence of intimidation to deter protesters from becoming violent and destroying the state of Utah. Their long-term goal: to arm and prepare the state of Utah against underground movements they believe will incite civil war.The group was conceived in reaction to a Black Lives Matter protest against police brutality organized by different groups in Provo, Utah, on 29 June. That day, a white protester pulled out a gun and shot another white man, who was not protesting but driving his vehicle into the protest route. Two shots were fired, and one hit the driver in the arm. Protesters claim the shooting was in self-defence because the driver was hitting marchers; the police found this claim to be unsubstantiated.When Casey Robertson, 47, watched a video of the incident, he felt outraged that this could happen in his “little town of Provo”. He posted on his Facebook page and a local yard sale page that “protesters descended on downtown Provo and terrorized citizens and SHOTS WERE FIRED.” He explained that Insurgence, one of the organizing group, was planning another protest for the next night and he rallied “concerned citizens” to come together, armed and ready to do their part in protecting downtown businesses.This was a call to arms. Utah Citizens’ Alarm was born.“I was like, ‘We need to stand together as citizens and go down there and show these people that we’re not going to allow violence, and that we are not going to allow these anarchist violent groups to tear down Provo,” Robertson told the Guardian. “It’s not going to happen without a fight.’”Utah Citizens’ Alarm has since organized regular military-style trainings for its members. Robertson says he has been tipped off “by secret sources within the government and law enforcement” that underground organizations like antifa are being funded by Isis, and are using groups like BLM to wreak havoc in the community to destroy American cities and ideals. Even if none of these theories stand up to scrutiny, he is dead set on not letting it happen.Robertson was born and raised in Provo. His dad was a Provo police officer and his mother a police dispatcher. He has voted both sides of the political aisle – he voted for Clinton and Obama, although he now considers himself a conservative. To him, this is not about politics, but good and evil, and he is ready to die for this cause.“My biggest fear, probably, is my children being brought up and having to grow up in a country that has completely lost its freedom, and that is under attack, and that is turning into this cesspool of violence and chaos,” he said. “Our enemy is now within, and that’s really scary to me.”This already has a chilling effect on protests: organizers have begun cancelling protests out of fear of Utah Citizens’ Alarm coming and escalating the already heated emotions. So far, militia members remain unchallenged, using their second amendment rights to openly bear arms in public throughout the state. ‘We are here to protect the community’That same Black Lives Matter protest that inspired Robertson’s fear was originally planned as a pro-police event in downtown Provo. John Sullivan, 26, the founder of Insurgence USA, a group for racial justice and police reform, organized a counter-protest alongside several other organizers. Protesters were to meet at the Provo police station at 6.30pm that night.Sullivan, one of the few black men organizing for racial justice in Utah, is not from Provo but Sandy, a suburb of Salt Lake City. Provo is a hyper-religious Latter-day Saint college town located 45 miles south of Salt Lake City. The city is made up of about 110,000 people, 88% white, 16.6% Hispanic, and less than 1% black. Local quirks include a strong second amendment culture, strong self-reliant groups, end of world preppers, a booming music scene and a charming Center Street that has at least three ice cream parlors and only recently got its first coffee shop, as the predominant demography does not drink coffee for religious purposes.The Black Lives Matter protesters started to march. They yelled “Whose streets? Our streets!” at drivers and lingered in front of cars, some of which started plowing through the crowd, claiming protesters had surrounded them and would not let them leave. (Videos show this was not the case.)Brian DeLong, a philosophy student at Utah Valley University, was grabbing a coffee when he saw protesters pass by. He joined in the march. At the intersection of University Avenue and Center Street, he was hit by a silver Excursion going southbound and immediately heard two gunshots, one after the other. DeLong bounced off the car and realized about five other people had also been hit. The driver frantically drove off.Nine minutes later, an ambulance appeared on the scene. The police did not come, and only appeared in full riot gear at 9.40pm when protesters made it back to the front of the police station.Drivers driving into protesters resulting in people shooting guns is becoming more frequent. On July 25, an Austin motorist drove into a crowd and fatally shot a protester. On the same night, another driver drove into protesters in Aurora, Colorado – except it was a protester who took out his gun and ended up shooting two fellow protesters.After the Provo protest, a policeman told Josianne Petit, 34, a criminal defense paralegal and founder of Mama & Papa Panthers, an organization dedicated to helping parents of all races in raising black children, that the police were inside watching the whole protest on Facebook Live. She said: “I felt fundamentally betrayed. I had worked with Provo PD extensively prior to that protest and I thought I had a good working relationship with them, but to hear the complete disregard they had for the lives of protesters was alarming to me, but also devastating.”Sullivan, the organizer, was not prepared for what transpired, nor did he know that anyone had a gun on his side of the protest. He created another Facebook event to hold a protest two days later in response.On that day, the two sides stood facing each other. The protesters carried posters; the Utah Citizens’ Alarm carried assault rifles. The protesters wore black; the paramilitia wore American flags. Both groups wore masks. On the west side, it was to protect themselves from the coronavirus. On the east side, masks were a protection from unwanted media attention.One young man carrying an assault rifle and two magazines of ammunition, with his face completely covered, pointed at the protesters and said: “What they have done is straight out of the communist manifesto … they say that your political beliefs are now your identity and, if somebody’s against your identity, they can justify whatever they do against you because they’re now repressing you for not agreeing with you.”He added: “Not everybody over there but the more extremists will agree with that. Black Lives Matter, as an organization, receives money from people who want to see violence happen.”Another young man walked over and said: “They hate America. They say they want to change America, that’s un-American.”The BLM protesters were authorized to march in the street. Utah Citizens’ Alarm was permitted to march on the sidewalks, guarding the storefronts from the protesters. About 250 policemen were brought in, as well as at least four snipers who stood on the roof of the Nu Skin building, a ten-storey building next to the Mormon temple.One police officer from Springville, a town just south of Provo, said he trusted 99.9% of the men and women with the guns, and said: “Those men and women would be the first people to take a bullet for any of the protesters there.”At the end of the march, Utah Citizens’ Alarm members came to the megaphone and repeated the Springville police officer’s line: “We are here to protect the community. We would be the first to take a bullet for each and every one of you.”Josey Gardner, 25, a protester and EMT studying English at BYU, asked: “Whose bullets are they protecting us from? They are the only ones with guns.” A chilling effect on free speechUtah Citizens’ Alarm is now organized into a pseudo-militia under the guidance of ex-military and ex-law enforcement on their newly formed board of advisers. They want Utah to be fully prepared for the “civil war” instigated by underground, militant forces.The group trains tirelessly. When on site, members are advised to move in groups of three and no less, because they have been told by informants on the inside that antifa attacks single out the strongest members in vulnerable situations. They have escape plans at every site, and promote a firm obedience to the local police, including when asked by them not to come to a protest.(Provo police chief Rich Ferguson made a statement that the Provo police have no relationship with the Utah Citizens’ Alarm, which Sergeant Nisha King, head of the Provo police department’s public information team, verified. )Meanwhile, militia members have now been to almost every protest on the Wasatch Front. They come to protests throughout the state with anywhere between 30 to 1,000 members in full uniform (sometimes homemade, sometimes military-grade), some in bulletproof vests, and openly carrying ARs. They silently stand in the background and observe, always on guard believing they may be called upon to act quickly if something goes wrong.A protest in Taylorsville was cancelled because too many protesters felt the risk was not worth being there. Robertson took this as a win.Jason Stevens, of Utah’s American Civil Liberties Union, stressed the importance of the historical context in what happened in the civil rights movement of the 1960s when armed groups, militias, local chapters of the Ku Klux Klan, white citizens councils, organizations both official and unofficial took it upon themselves to defend what they saw as their rights and property with violent and systemic intimidation and threats to African Americans and others in those areas.“I am not saying that is what is happening here. But with context, if you are a protester and you see groups like this showing up at your protest, that’s got to be in the back of your mind, this history of intimidation and threats.”Outside of Utah, these threats are present and real for protesters. In Omak, Washington, small civilian militias are forming to threaten protesters. In New Mexico, there is another civilian militia group that call themselves the New Mexico Civil Guard reacting to rioting and looting.In Portland, the threats to free speech and the right to protest are coming from the federal government, which has deployed unidentified agents to quell protests by forcibly grabbing protesters and taking them away in unidentified vehicles.BLM-adjacent groups held a “Stop Kidnapping Protesters” event in Salt Lake City on 22 July, in reference to what took place in Portland. Robertson and his team came in full garb and made a live video. Robertson said: “That’s the name of the protest – ‘Stop kidnapping protesters’. My boy over here translated it as ‘stop arresting criminals’. The awesome thing is these people that are out creating chaos and committing crimes, they are being watched. Law enforcement finally started to go around and pick them up and arrest them. I am all for it.”Additionally, lines between the second and first amendment are complicated, especially as open-carry laws in Utah make it legal for groups of heavily armed individuals to gather in places where the first amendment is being honored, such as protests.“If the right to bear arms is overriding the right to free speech, that may be cause for concern,” said Dr RonNell Andersen Jones, a law professor at the University of Utah. “Our constitutional doctrine hasn’t yet had the chance to really tussle with the question of what the presence of guns does to a free speech event. Short of more overt threats of violence, we usually protect protesters with guns in the same ways we protect protesters without them. But if the express goal of the armed individuals is to intimidate people who might otherwise share their views, that’s especially troubling.”In response to Utah Citizens’ Alarm, Utah protesters are now arming themselves. John Sullivan of Insurgence USA held his first armed protest on 22 July at the Utah state capitol, carrying an AR-15 and a magazine of ammo. He is encouraging Insurgence USA protesters to purchase guns so they can protect themselves if there is violence.“Basically, nobody in our group owns a gun except for me; nobody was planning on ever shooting anyone. So the fact that I bought a bulletproof vest and more magazines and our people are buying guns should say a lot. It shouldn’t be that way.”Petit, who also organizes alongside BLM and Insurgence USA, has recruited ex-military to train and arm her protesters, because she feels the threat is real as long as Utah Citizens’ Alarm is showing up.“The only way forward is to make sure we are prepared, because at this point the options the only options available to us are when things go crazy we lie down and die, or we fight back.“And I’m sorry, I’m not lying down for anybody.”
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines
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In Utah, members of a militia claim their presence deters protesters from becoming violent and destroying the stateThe Utah Citizens’ Alarm is only a month old, and yet it already boasts 15,000-plus members.The citizen militia’s recruits wear military fatigues and carry assault rifles. Their short-term goal, they say, is to act as a physical presence of intimidation to deter protesters from becoming violent and destroying the state of Utah. Their long-term goal: to arm and prepare the state of Utah against underground movements they believe will incite civil war.The group was conceived in reaction to a Black Lives Matter protest against police brutality organized by different groups in Provo, Utah, on 29 June. That day, a white protester pulled out a gun and shot another white man, who was not protesting but driving his vehicle into the protest route. Two shots were fired, and one hit the driver in the arm. Protesters claim the shooting was in self-defence because the driver was hitting marchers; the police found this claim to be unsubstantiated.When Casey Robertson, 47, watched a video of the incident, he felt outraged that this could happen in his “little town of Provo”. He posted on his Facebook page and a local yard sale page that “protesters descended on downtown Provo and terrorized citizens and SHOTS WERE FIRED.” He explained that Insurgence, one of the organizing group, was planning another protest for the next night and he rallied “concerned citizens” to come together, armed and ready to do their part in protecting downtown businesses.This was a call to arms. Utah Citizens’ Alarm was born.“I was like, ‘We need to stand together as citizens and go down there and show these people that we’re not going to allow violence, and that we are not going to allow these anarchist violent groups to tear down Provo,” Robertson told the Guardian. “It’s not going to happen without a fight.’”Utah Citizens’ Alarm has since organized regular military-style trainings for its members. Robertson says he has been tipped off “by secret sources within the government and law enforcement” that underground organizations like antifa are being funded by Isis, and are using groups like BLM to wreak havoc in the community to destroy American cities and ideals. Even if none of these theories stand up to scrutiny, he is dead set on not letting it happen.Robertson was born and raised in Provo. His dad was a Provo police officer and his mother a police dispatcher. He has voted both sides of the political aisle – he voted for Clinton and Obama, although he now considers himself a conservative. To him, this is not about politics, but good and evil, and he is ready to die for this cause.“My biggest fear, probably, is my children being brought up and having to grow up in a country that has completely lost its freedom, and that is under attack, and that is turning into this cesspool of violence and chaos,” he said. “Our enemy is now within, and that’s really scary to me.”This already has a chilling effect on protests: organizers have begun cancelling protests out of fear of Utah Citizens’ Alarm coming and escalating the already heated emotions. So far, militia members remain unchallenged, using their second amendment rights to openly bear arms in public throughout the state. ‘We are here to protect the community’That same Black Lives Matter protest that inspired Robertson’s fear was originally planned as a pro-police event in downtown Provo. John Sullivan, 26, the founder of Insurgence USA, a group for racial justice and police reform, organized a counter-protest alongside several other organizers. Protesters were to meet at the Provo police station at 6.30pm that night.Sullivan, one of the few black men organizing for racial justice in Utah, is not from Provo but Sandy, a suburb of Salt Lake City. Provo is a hyper-religious Latter-day Saint college town located 45 miles south of Salt Lake City. The city is made up of about 110,000 people, 88% white, 16.6% Hispanic, and less than 1% black. Local quirks include a strong second amendment culture, strong self-reliant groups, end of world preppers, a booming music scene and a charming Center Street that has at least three ice cream parlors and only recently got its first coffee shop, as the predominant demography does not drink coffee for religious purposes.The Black Lives Matter protesters started to march. They yelled “Whose streets? Our streets!” at drivers and lingered in front of cars, some of which started plowing through the crowd, claiming protesters had surrounded them and would not let them leave. (Videos show this was not the case.)Brian DeLong, a philosophy student at Utah Valley University, was grabbing a coffee when he saw protesters pass by. He joined in the march. At the intersection of University Avenue and Center Street, he was hit by a silver Excursion going southbound and immediately heard two gunshots, one after the other. DeLong bounced off the car and realized about five other people had also been hit. The driver frantically drove off.Nine minutes later, an ambulance appeared on the scene. The police did not come, and only appeared in full riot gear at 9.40pm when protesters made it back to the front of the police station.Drivers driving into protesters resulting in people shooting guns is becoming more frequent. On July 25, an Austin motorist drove into a crowd and fatally shot a protester. On the same night, another driver drove into protesters in Aurora, Colorado – except it was a protester who took out his gun and ended up shooting two fellow protesters.After the Provo protest, a policeman told Josianne Petit, 34, a criminal defense paralegal and founder of Mama & Papa Panthers, an organization dedicated to helping parents of all races in raising black children, that the police were inside watching the whole protest on Facebook Live. She said: “I felt fundamentally betrayed. I had worked with Provo PD extensively prior to that protest and I thought I had a good working relationship with them, but to hear the complete disregard they had for the lives of protesters was alarming to me, but also devastating.”Sullivan, the organizer, was not prepared for what transpired, nor did he know that anyone had a gun on his side of the protest. He created another Facebook event to hold a protest two days later in response.On that day, the two sides stood facing each other. The protesters carried posters; the Utah Citizens’ Alarm carried assault rifles. The protesters wore black; the paramilitia wore American flags. Both groups wore masks. On the west side, it was to protect themselves from the coronavirus. On the east side, masks were a protection from unwanted media attention.One young man carrying an assault rifle and two magazines of ammunition, with his face completely covered, pointed at the protesters and said: “What they have done is straight out of the communist manifesto … they say that your political beliefs are now your identity and, if somebody’s against your identity, they can justify whatever they do against you because they’re now repressing you for not agreeing with you.”He added: “Not everybody over there but the more extremists will agree with that. Black Lives Matter, as an organization, receives money from people who want to see violence happen.”Another young man walked over and said: “They hate America. They say they want to change America, that’s un-American.”The BLM protesters were authorized to march in the street. Utah Citizens’ Alarm was permitted to march on the sidewalks, guarding the storefronts from the protesters. About 250 policemen were brought in, as well as at least four snipers who stood on the roof of the Nu Skin building, a ten-storey building next to the Mormon temple.One police officer from Springville, a town just south of Provo, said he trusted 99.9% of the men and women with the guns, and said: “Those men and women would be the first people to take a bullet for any of the protesters there.”At the end of the march, Utah Citizens’ Alarm members came to the megaphone and repeated the Springville police officer’s line: “We are here to protect the community. We would be the first to take a bullet for each and every one of you.”Josey Gardner, 25, a protester and EMT studying English at BYU, asked: “Whose bullets are they protecting us from? They are the only ones with guns.” A chilling effect on free speechUtah Citizens’ Alarm is now organized into a pseudo-militia under the guidance of ex-military and ex-law enforcement on their newly formed board of advisers. They want Utah to be fully prepared for the “civil war” instigated by underground, militant forces.The group trains tirelessly. When on site, members are advised to move in groups of three and no less, because they have been told by informants on the inside that antifa attacks single out the strongest members in vulnerable situations. They have escape plans at every site, and promote a firm obedience to the local police, including when asked by them not to come to a protest.(Provo police chief Rich Ferguson made a statement that the Provo police have no relationship with the Utah Citizens’ Alarm, which Sergeant Nisha King, head of the Provo police department’s public information team, verified. )Meanwhile, militia members have now been to almost every protest on the Wasatch Front. They come to protests throughout the state with anywhere between 30 to 1,000 members in full uniform (sometimes homemade, sometimes military-grade), some in bulletproof vests, and openly carrying ARs. They silently stand in the background and observe, always on guard believing they may be called upon to act quickly if something goes wrong.A protest in Taylorsville was cancelled because too many protesters felt the risk was not worth being there. Robertson took this as a win.Jason Stevens, of Utah’s American Civil Liberties Union, stressed the importance of the historical context in what happened in the civil rights movement of the 1960s when armed groups, militias, local chapters of the Ku Klux Klan, white citizens councils, organizations both official and unofficial took it upon themselves to defend what they saw as their rights and property with violent and systemic intimidation and threats to African Americans and others in those areas.“I am not saying that is what is happening here. But with context, if you are a protester and you see groups like this showing up at your protest, that’s got to be in the back of your mind, this history of intimidation and threats.”Outside of Utah, these threats are present and real for protesters. In Omak, Washington, small civilian militias are forming to threaten protesters. In New Mexico, there is another civilian militia group that call themselves the New Mexico Civil Guard reacting to rioting and looting.In Portland, the threats to free speech and the right to protest are coming from the federal government, which has deployed unidentified agents to quell protests by forcibly grabbing protesters and taking them away in unidentified vehicles.BLM-adjacent groups held a “Stop Kidnapping Protesters” event in Salt Lake City on 22 July, in reference to what took place in Portland. Robertson and his team came in full garb and made a live video. Robertson said: “That’s the name of the protest – ‘Stop kidnapping protesters’. My boy over here translated it as ‘stop arresting criminals’. The awesome thing is these people that are out creating chaos and committing crimes, they are being watched. Law enforcement finally started to go around and pick them up and arrest them. I am all for it.”Additionally, lines between the second and first amendment are complicated, especially as open-carry laws in Utah make it legal for groups of heavily armed individuals to gather in places where the first amendment is being honored, such as protests.“If the right to bear arms is overriding the right to free speech, that may be cause for concern,” said Dr RonNell Andersen Jones, a law professor at the University of Utah. “Our constitutional doctrine hasn’t yet had the chance to really tussle with the question of what the presence of guns does to a free speech event. Short of more overt threats of violence, we usually protect protesters with guns in the same ways we protect protesters without them. But if the express goal of the armed individuals is to intimidate people who might otherwise share their views, that’s especially troubling.”In response to Utah Citizens’ Alarm, Utah protesters are now arming themselves. John Sullivan of Insurgence USA held his first armed protest on 22 July at the Utah state capitol, carrying an AR-15 and a magazine of ammo. He is encouraging Insurgence USA protesters to purchase guns so they can protect themselves if there is violence.“Basically, nobody in our group owns a gun except for me; nobody was planning on ever shooting anyone. So the fact that I bought a bulletproof vest and more magazines and our people are buying guns should say a lot. It shouldn’t be that way.”Petit, who also organizes alongside BLM and Insurgence USA, has recruited ex-military to train and arm her protesters, because she feels the threat is real as long as Utah Citizens’ Alarm is showing up.“The only way forward is to make sure we are prepared, because at this point the options the only options available to us are when things go crazy we lie down and die, or we fight back.“And I’m sorry, I’m not lying down for anybody.”
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ATV Accident Lawyer Lindon Utah
Lindon was established as a settlement in 1861 by pioneer families. It was named after the Linden tree but the spelling was mistakenly written as “Lindon”, which became the official spelling. Growing rapidly in the late 1990’s and through the first decade of the 21st century, the little country town is now a bedroom community for over 10,000 residents. Lindon is well known in the Emergency Preparedness community throughout the United States due to First Place City Preparedness awards in 2009, 2010 and 2011 for any city of any size. The awards are based on city, business, school and resident preparedness planning and involvement in an annual citywide emergency drill in addition to a high-level of involvement in preparedness as a way of life for residents, businesses and city governmental departments.
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The city motto Lindon – A little bit o’ country represents the relaxed nature of the community where almost all residential lots are 5 acre or larger and include animal rights. Lindon has an abundant cultural and historical background. Originally settled in 1861, Lindon began as pioneers moved into what was then the Lindon grazing land. The town was originally named “String Town” because of the way the houses were strung up and down the street between the towns of Orem and Pleasant Grove. An old linden tree (Tilia) growing in town in 1901 inspired the present (misspelled) name. Over the past century Lindon has seen organized development, but it has tried to remain true to its motto: “Lindon: a little bit of country”. Lindon, Utah’s estimated population is 10,970 according to the most recent United States census estimates. Lindon, Utah is the 55th largest city in Utah based on official 2017 estimates from the US Census Bureau. The overall median age is 27 years, 27 years for males, and 27 years for females. For every 100 females there are 92.6 males.
According to the most recent ACS, the racial composition of Lindon Utah was: • White: 93.63% • Two or more races: 2.95% • Asian: 1.38% • Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.93% • Other race: 0.85% • Black or African American: 0.25% • Native American: 0.00%
Pros of Living in Lindon • Attractive setting • Educated population • Future job growth Cons of Living in Lindon • Rising living costs • Some air quality issues • Growth and sprawl
Economy in Lindon, Utah
Lindon has an unemployment rate of 2.8%. The US average is 3.9%. Lindon has seen the job market increase by 2.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 51.7%, which is higher than the US average of 33.5%.
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Tax Rates for Lindon
• The Sales Tax Rate for Lindon is 6.9%. The US average is 7.3%. • The Income Tax Rate for Lindon is 5.0%. The US average is 4.6%. • Tax Rates can have a big impact when Comparing Cost of Living. • The average income of a Lindon resident is $22,990 a year. The US average is $28,555 a year. • The Median household income of a Lindon resident is $83,182 a year. The US average is $53,482 a year.
Cost of Living in Lindon, Utah
Our cost of living indices are based on a US average of 100. An amount below 100 means Lindon is cheaper than the US average. A cost of living index above 100 means Lindon, Utah is more expensive. When you use your ATV to go for a ride on those backcountry trails, discover the best hunting spot, or head across the field on your farm, you can rest assured you have the insurance protection you need should an accident occur. Many people think their homeowners’ policy will provide the protection they need for their ATV activities, but a homeowner’s policy is simply not enough. The coverage provided by a homeowner’s policy may limit your coverage to liability, or it may only cover your ATV if you drive it on your property. You need coverage that can go everywhere you venture and protect you against your specific ATV risks.
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Insurance for ATVs
• Liability Coverage: Liability insurance is often required to drive on public or state lands. ATV liability insurance covers damage to someone else’s property or if someone else is injured. ATV liability insurance, however, doesn’t cover injury or damage to you or your property. • Collision coverage: ATVs can go almost anywhere unfortunately, those “all terrain” moments sometimes end in a collision. If an accident does occur, you’ll be glad you had collision insurance. Collision insurance covers damage to your ATV that affects the operation or safety of the vehicle. It does not typically cover cosmetic damages. • Comprehensive coverage: If your ATV is damaged by something other than a collision–such as a fire comprehensive insurance can provide coverage for that damage. It can also cover permanent accessories attached to your ATV. • Uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage: If your ATV is hit by someone without insurance, uninsured coverage will help up to your coverage limit. • Medical payments coverage: ATVs can be dangerous. There were an estimated 115,000 ER visits from ATV injuries in 2010. ATV medical payments coverage pays for necessary medical treatments as a result of an ATV accident, no matter who is at fault, up to your coverage limits. Additional Considerations Here are some other considerations that Lawyer can walk you through as we put together an ATV policy that is right for you: • Some states require ATV liability insurance to ride on state-owned or public lands. • If you tow your ATV, make sure you understand your insurance policy and know what will be covered in case something goes wrong. Sometimes ATV insurance policies cover towed vehicles, though the coverage is limited to liability only. A policy on your trailer may be necessary to cover damages to your ATV while in transport. • Know your state’s regulations for insurance, safety, registration, and use. Different states have different laws regarding the age of riders, when and where ATVs can be used, and whether or not insurance or registration is required. • ATVs are designed for one rider. Multiple riders make controlling the ATV difficult, and the passenger doesn’t have a safe way to stay on. Unless your ATV is specifically built for two, do not allow passengers. • If you allow children under 18 to use ATVs, ensure they are using an ATV appropriate for their size, that they have been properly trained, and that they are wearing appropriate safety gear. Always supervise children on ATVs. • Never drink or use drugs while operating an ATV. • Remember that an ATV is a vehicle. Only travel at speeds that are safe for your experience levels, as well as the road conditions. • Let your Lawyer know if you use your ATV for commercial use or for racing. Your coverage needs will vary. • Wear ATV-approved helmets that are properly fitted, as well as other safety gear such as goggles, boots, gloves, pants, and long-sleeved shirts. • Take ATV training classes.
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Protecting You and Your ATV Wheels
When it’s time to break out your four-wheeler and head out for a ride, the last thing you want on your mind is whether or not you are properly insured. With an All-Terrain Vehicle insurance policy from Advance Insurance, you can ride with confidence knowing that your quad is protected. We cover vehicles in Lindon, Salt Lake City, Provo, Las Vegas and surrounding communities. No matter whether you use an ATV, APV, UTV, dune buggy or a similarly four-wheeled vehicle, ATV Insurance offers several specialized coverage options, including: • Collision coverage for damage from rocks, trees, and other obstacles or debris. • Comprehensive coverage as additional security for loss or damage from theft, fire, or vandalism. • Property damage insurance to cover expenses to another person’s property for which you are liable. • Bodily injury to pay medical expenses to others if you are held liable in an accident. • Uninsured motorist insurance to protect you from loss or damage caused by uninsured and underinsured drivers.
The Utah’s Off-Highway Vehicle Program brochure outlines the basic responsibilities of ATV riders. The brochure covers registration, equipment, and operation requirements, safety tips, courtesy and ethics.
ATV Laws and Rules
• Wear Your Helmet: For riders and passengers under age 18, it’s the law, but we advise everyone to wear a helmet. It can save your life. Properly worn, a helmet won’t reduce vision or hearing and helps cut out windblast. • Gloves, abrasion resistant clothing, and over the ankle boots are also highly recommended • Youth, 8-15 years of age, must possess an ATV education certificate before operating an ATV on public land • Ride On Utah! – Ride only on designated routes and areas open to ATVs • Ride on the right side of the road and in single file • Be alert to oncoming traffic, especially on blind curves or in dips and crests of hills • It is illegal to drive an ATV while under the influence of alcohol or drugs • A red or orange “whip flag” must be attached to ATVs when riding in sand dune areas • Lights must be used between sunset and sunrise • Be sure your brakes will control and stop your ATV • Mufflers with an approved spark arrestor are required on all ATVs (snowmobiles do not require spark arrestors)
Report ATV Accidents
If you are involved in an ATV accident, help any other people involved in the accident and notify local law enforcement officers immediately by the quickest means of communication available. Give your name, address, and identification to any injured person or owner of property that is damaged in the accident. If anyone was injured or killed in the accident, submit a completed and signed ATV Accident. Report to the Utah Division of Parks and Recreation within 15 days. ATV accident forms are available from the Division of Parks and Recreation or any state parks ranger. Information in accident reports is confidential.
Why Are ATVs So Expensive?
Many new quad enthusiasts spend time looking at ATV videos and when they get tired of renting and are think buying their first quad, they are often shocked with the price. The truth is, ATVs can be a pricey acquisition. ATV are expensive because they were (and still are) used for lodging fertilizer and carrying tools on a farm, and because of their price markup in the US market, especially when talking about high-end brands. They are also used to plow snow. Even though nowadays ATVs are used for mostly recreational purposes, they are a useful tool you can find on most farms. Their strengths as a utility vehicle rise up prices. Many quad enthusiasts comment about the markup that new ATVs have in the US. an Alterra 500 can be had for hundreds of dollars cheaper in Europe or Australia compared to America.
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How Can You Buy An ATV And Not Break The Bank?
One of the most important things to keep in mind when making a new purchase is to shop around as much as possible. There are some dealers which can be really helpful, trying to find you the ideal machine for your tastes, and there are others which will only see you as a giant money sign. That’s why it’s beneficial to compare prices between dealerships to try to get the best deal possible. Another important thing to keep in mind is that you will rarely pay full MSRP for an ATV unless it’s a hot new model. There is always a rebate going on. and even after that, they can easily shave hundreds off MSRP just to keep you interested in the product.
Experienced ATV Accident Attorneys in Lindon
ATV accident incidents vary depending on the nature and type of vehicles involved, the people injured, the intensity of the injuries sustained and the collision, and the traffic rules actually violated. Te ATV attorneys in Lindon will effectively all these details and appropriately determine the amount you deserve in compensation from the negligent party’s insurance company. Unlike the experienced ATV accident ATV attorneys in Utah, an ordinary ATV accident lawyer may not successfully defend your rights by taking on multinational insurance companies with the aim of minimizing losses incurred in insurance claims. This is the principal reason why you need the services of highly experienced Lindon ATV accident lawyers. They will deal with your case with the best of wit and obtain reasonable compensation in damage even when there is no visible damage on your vehicle after a collision. All that matters is evidence of the collision. The best ATV accident attorneys in Lindon are respected in Utah for successfully suing and winning even car accident cases with the lowest impact magnitude. Therefore, you are assured that they will provide you with top-notch legal representation in a court of law and lodge a claim for damages to your car and the injuries you sustained in the accident
Lindon Utah ATV Accident Attorney Free Consultation
When you need legal help with an ATV accident and injury in Lindon Utah, please call Ascent Law LLC for your free consultation (801) 676-5506. We want to help you.
Ascent Law LLC 8833 S. Redwood Road, Suite C West Jordan, Utah 84088 United States Telephone: (801) 676-5506
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from Michael Anderson https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/atv-accident-lawyer-lindon-utah/
from Criminal Defense Lawyer West Jordan Utah https://criminaldefenselawyerwestjordanutah.wordpress.com/2020/05/20/atv-accident-lawyer-lindon-utah/
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ATV Accident Lawyer Lindon Utah
Lindon was established as a settlement in 1861 by pioneer families. It was named after the Linden tree but the spelling was mistakenly written as “Lindon”, which became the official spelling. Growing rapidly in the late 1990’s and through the first decade of the 21st century, the little country town is now a bedroom community for over 10,000 residents. Lindon is well known in the Emergency Preparedness community throughout the United States due to First Place City Preparedness awards in 2009, 2010 and 2011 for any city of any size. The awards are based on city, business, school and resident preparedness planning and involvement in an annual citywide emergency drill in addition to a high-level of involvement in preparedness as a way of life for residents, businesses and city governmental departments.
youtube
The city motto Lindon – A little bit o’ country represents the relaxed nature of the community where almost all residential lots are 5 acre or larger and include animal rights. Lindon has an abundant cultural and historical background. Originally settled in 1861, Lindon began as pioneers moved into what was then the Lindon grazing land. The town was originally named “String Town” because of the way the houses were strung up and down the street between the towns of Orem and Pleasant Grove. An old linden tree (Tilia) growing in town in 1901 inspired the present (misspelled) name. Over the past century Lindon has seen organized development, but it has tried to remain true to its motto: “Lindon: a little bit of country”. Lindon, Utah’s estimated population is 10,970 according to the most recent United States census estimates. Lindon, Utah is the 55th largest city in Utah based on official 2017 estimates from the US Census Bureau. The overall median age is 27 years, 27 years for males, and 27 years for females. For every 100 females there are 92.6 males.
According to the most recent ACS, the racial composition of Lindon Utah was: • White: 93.63% • Two or more races: 2.95% • Asian: 1.38% • Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.93% • Other race: 0.85% • Black or African American: 0.25% • Native American: 0.00%
Pros of Living in Lindon • Attractive setting • Educated population • Future job growth Cons of Living in Lindon • Rising living costs • Some air quality issues • Growth and sprawl
Economy in Lindon, Utah
Lindon has an unemployment rate of 2.8%. The US average is 3.9%. Lindon has seen the job market increase by 2.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 51.7%, which is higher than the US average of 33.5%.
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Tax Rates for Lindon
• The Sales Tax Rate for Lindon is 6.9%. The US average is 7.3%. • The Income Tax Rate for Lindon is 5.0%. The US average is 4.6%. • Tax Rates can have a big impact when Comparing Cost of Living. • The average income of a Lindon resident is $22,990 a year. The US average is $28,555 a year. • The Median household income of a Lindon resident is $83,182 a year. The US average is $53,482 a year.
Cost of Living in Lindon, Utah
Our cost of living indices are based on a US average of 100. An amount below 100 means Lindon is cheaper than the US average. A cost of living index above 100 means Lindon, Utah is more expensive. When you use your ATV to go for a ride on those backcountry trails, discover the best hunting spot, or head across the field on your farm, you can rest assured you have the insurance protection you need should an accident occur. Many people think their homeowners’ policy will provide the protection they need for their ATV activities, but a homeowner’s policy is simply not enough. The coverage provided by a homeowner’s policy may limit your coverage to liability, or it may only cover your ATV if you drive it on your property. You need coverage that can go everywhere you venture and protect you against your specific ATV risks.
youtube
Insurance for ATVs
• Liability Coverage: Liability insurance is often required to drive on public or state lands. ATV liability insurance covers damage to someone else’s property or if someone else is injured. ATV liability insurance, however, doesn’t cover injury or damage to you or your property. • Collision coverage: ATVs can go almost anywhere unfortunately, those “all terrain” moments sometimes end in a collision. If an accident does occur, you’ll be glad you had collision insurance. Collision insurance covers damage to your ATV that affects the operation or safety of the vehicle. It does not typically cover cosmetic damages. • Comprehensive coverage: If your ATV is damaged by something other than a collision–such as a fire comprehensive insurance can provide coverage for that damage. It can also cover permanent accessories attached to your ATV. • Uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage: If your ATV is hit by someone without insurance, uninsured coverage will help up to your coverage limit. • Medical payments coverage: ATVs can be dangerous. There were an estimated 115,000 ER visits from ATV injuries in 2010. ATV medical payments coverage pays for necessary medical treatments as a result of an ATV accident, no matter who is at fault, up to your coverage limits. Additional Considerations Here are some other considerations that Lawyer can walk you through as we put together an ATV policy that is right for you: • Some states require ATV liability insurance to ride on state-owned or public lands. • If you tow your ATV, make sure you understand your insurance policy and know what will be covered in case something goes wrong. Sometimes ATV insurance policies cover towed vehicles, though the coverage is limited to liability only. A policy on your trailer may be necessary to cover damages to your ATV while in transport. • Know your state’s regulations for insurance, safety, registration, and use. Different states have different laws regarding the age of riders, when and where ATVs can be used, and whether or not insurance or registration is required. • ATVs are designed for one rider. Multiple riders make controlling the ATV difficult, and the passenger doesn’t have a safe way to stay on. Unless your ATV is specifically built for two, do not allow passengers. • If you allow children under 18 to use ATVs, ensure they are using an ATV appropriate for their size, that they have been properly trained, and that they are wearing appropriate safety gear. Always supervise children on ATVs. • Never drink or use drugs while operating an ATV. • Remember that an ATV is a vehicle. Only travel at speeds that are safe for your experience levels, as well as the road conditions. • Let your Lawyer know if you use your ATV for commercial use or for racing. Your coverage needs will vary. • Wear ATV-approved helmets that are properly fitted, as well as other safety gear such as goggles, boots, gloves, pants, and long-sleeved shirts. • Take ATV training classes.
youtube
Protecting You and Your ATV Wheels
When it’s time to break out your four-wheeler and head out for a ride, the last thing you want on your mind is whether or not you are properly insured. With an All-Terrain Vehicle insurance policy from Advance Insurance, you can ride with confidence knowing that your quad is protected. We cover vehicles in Lindon, Salt Lake City, Provo, Las Vegas and surrounding communities. No matter whether you use an ATV, APV, UTV, dune buggy or a similarly four-wheeled vehicle, ATV Insurance offers several specialized coverage options, including: • Collision coverage for damage from rocks, trees, and other obstacles or debris. • Comprehensive coverage as additional security for loss or damage from theft, fire, or vandalism. • Property damage insurance to cover expenses to another person’s property for which you are liable. • Bodily injury to pay medical expenses to others if you are held liable in an accident. • Uninsured motorist insurance to protect you from loss or damage caused by uninsured and underinsured drivers.
The Utah’s Off-Highway Vehicle Program brochure outlines the basic responsibilities of ATV riders. The brochure covers registration, equipment, and operation requirements, safety tips, courtesy and ethics.
ATV Laws and Rules
• Wear Your Helmet: For riders and passengers under age 18, it’s the law, but we advise everyone to wear a helmet. It can save your life. Properly worn, a helmet won’t reduce vision or hearing and helps cut out windblast. • Gloves, abrasion resistant clothing, and over the ankle boots are also highly recommended • Youth, 8-15 years of age, must possess an ATV education certificate before operating an ATV on public land • Ride On Utah! – Ride only on designated routes and areas open to ATVs • Ride on the right side of the road and in single file • Be alert to oncoming traffic, especially on blind curves or in dips and crests of hills • It is illegal to drive an ATV while under the influence of alcohol or drugs • A red or orange “whip flag” must be attached to ATVs when riding in sand dune areas • Lights must be used between sunset and sunrise • Be sure your brakes will control and stop your ATV • Mufflers with an approved spark arrestor are required on all ATVs (snowmobiles do not require spark arrestors)
Report ATV Accidents
If you are involved in an ATV accident, help any other people involved in the accident and notify local law enforcement officers immediately by the quickest means of communication available. Give your name, address, and identification to any injured person or owner of property that is damaged in the accident. If anyone was injured or killed in the accident, submit a completed and signed ATV Accident. Report to the Utah Division of Parks and Recreation within 15 days. ATV accident forms are available from the Division of Parks and Recreation or any state parks ranger. Information in accident reports is confidential.
Why Are ATVs So Expensive?
Many new quad enthusiasts spend time looking at ATV videos and when they get tired of renting and are think buying their first quad, they are often shocked with the price. The truth is, ATVs can be a pricey acquisition. ATV are expensive because they were (and still are) used for lodging fertilizer and carrying tools on a farm, and because of their price markup in the US market, especially when talking about high-end brands. They are also used to plow snow. Even though nowadays ATVs are used for mostly recreational purposes, they are a useful tool you can find on most farms. Their strengths as a utility vehicle rise up prices. Many quad enthusiasts comment about the markup that new ATVs have in the US. an Alterra 500 can be had for hundreds of dollars cheaper in Europe or Australia compared to America.
youtube
How Can You Buy An ATV And Not Break The Bank?
One of the most important things to keep in mind when making a new purchase is to shop around as much as possible. There are some dealers which can be really helpful, trying to find you the ideal machine for your tastes, and there are others which will only see you as a giant money sign. That’s why it’s beneficial to compare prices between dealerships to try to get the best deal possible. Another important thing to keep in mind is that you will rarely pay full MSRP for an ATV unless it’s a hot new model. There is always a rebate going on. and even after that, they can easily shave hundreds off MSRP just to keep you interested in the product.
Experienced ATV Accident Attorneys in Lindon
ATV accident incidents vary depending on the nature and type of vehicles involved, the people injured, the intensity of the injuries sustained and the collision, and the traffic rules actually violated. Te ATV attorneys in Lindon will effectively all these details and appropriately determine the amount you deserve in compensation from the negligent party’s insurance company. Unlike the experienced ATV accident ATV attorneys in Utah, an ordinary ATV accident lawyer may not successfully defend your rights by taking on multinational insurance companies with the aim of minimizing losses incurred in insurance claims. This is the principal reason why you need the services of highly experienced Lindon ATV accident lawyers. They will deal with your case with the best of wit and obtain reasonable compensation in damage even when there is no visible damage on your vehicle after a collision. All that matters is evidence of the collision. The best ATV accident attorneys in Lindon are respected in Utah for successfully suing and winning even car accident cases with the lowest impact magnitude. Therefore, you are assured that they will provide you with top-notch legal representation in a court of law and lodge a claim for damages to your car and the injuries you sustained in the accident
Lindon Utah ATV Accident Attorney Free Consultation
When you need legal help with an ATV accident and injury in Lindon Utah, please call Ascent Law LLC for your free consultation (801) 676-5506. We want to help you.
Ascent Law LLC 8833 S. Redwood Road, Suite C West Jordan, Utah 84088 United States Telephone: (801) 676-5506
Ascent Law LLC
4.9 stars – based on 67 reviews
Recent Posts
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from Michael Anderson https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/atv-accident-lawyer-lindon-utah/ from Divorce Lawyer Nelson Farms Utah https://divorcelawyernelsonfarmsutah.tumblr.com/post/618598758070009856
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ATV Accident Lawyer Lindon Utah
Lindon was established as a settlement in 1861 by pioneer families. It was named after the Linden tree but the spelling was mistakenly written as “Lindon”, which became the official spelling. Growing rapidly in the late 1990’s and through the first decade of the 21st century, the little country town is now a bedroom community for over 10,000 residents. Lindon is well known in the Emergency Preparedness community throughout the United States due to First Place City Preparedness awards in 2009, 2010 and 2011 for any city of any size. The awards are based on city, business, school and resident preparedness planning and involvement in an annual citywide emergency drill in addition to a high-level of involvement in preparedness as a way of life for residents, businesses and city governmental departments.
youtube
The city motto Lindon – A little bit o’ country represents the relaxed nature of the community where almost all residential lots are 5 acre or larger and include animal rights. Lindon has an abundant cultural and historical background. Originally settled in 1861, Lindon began as pioneers moved into what was then the Lindon grazing land. The town was originally named “String Town” because of the way the houses were strung up and down the street between the towns of Orem and Pleasant Grove. An old linden tree (Tilia) growing in town in 1901 inspired the present (misspelled) name. Over the past century Lindon has seen organized development, but it has tried to remain true to its motto: “Lindon: a little bit of country”. Lindon, Utah’s estimated population is 10,970 according to the most recent United States census estimates. Lindon, Utah is the 55th largest city in Utah based on official 2017 estimates from the US Census Bureau. The overall median age is 27 years, 27 years for males, and 27 years for females. For every 100 females there are 92.6 males.
According to the most recent ACS, the racial composition of Lindon Utah was: • White: 93.63% • Two or more races: 2.95% • Asian: 1.38% • Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.93% • Other race: 0.85% • Black or African American: 0.25% • Native American: 0.00%
Pros of Living in Lindon • Attractive setting • Educated population • Future job growth Cons of Living in Lindon • Rising living costs • Some air quality issues • Growth and sprawl
Economy in Lindon, Utah
Lindon has an unemployment rate of 2.8%. The US average is 3.9%. Lindon has seen the job market increase by 2.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 51.7%, which is higher than the US average of 33.5%.
youtube
Tax Rates for Lindon
• The Sales Tax Rate for Lindon is 6.9%. The US average is 7.3%. • The Income Tax Rate for Lindon is 5.0%. The US average is 4.6%. • Tax Rates can have a big impact when Comparing Cost of Living. • The average income of a Lindon resident is $22,990 a year. The US average is $28,555 a year. • The Median household income of a Lindon resident is $83,182 a year. The US average is $53,482 a year.
Cost of Living in Lindon, Utah
Our cost of living indices are based on a US average of 100. An amount below 100 means Lindon is cheaper than the US average. A cost of living index above 100 means Lindon, Utah is more expensive. When you use your ATV to go for a ride on those backcountry trails, discover the best hunting spot, or head across the field on your farm, you can rest assured you have the insurance protection you need should an accident occur. Many people think their homeowners’ policy will provide the protection they need for their ATV activities, but a homeowner’s policy is simply not enough. The coverage provided by a homeowner’s policy may limit your coverage to liability, or it may only cover your ATV if you drive it on your property. You need coverage that can go everywhere you venture and protect you against your specific ATV risks.
youtube
Insurance for ATVs
• Liability Coverage: Liability insurance is often required to drive on public or state lands. ATV liability insurance covers damage to someone else’s property or if someone else is injured. ATV liability insurance, however, doesn’t cover injury or damage to you or your property. • Collision coverage: ATVs can go almost anywhere unfortunately, those “all terrain” moments sometimes end in a collision. If an accident does occur, you’ll be glad you had collision insurance. Collision insurance covers damage to your ATV that affects the operation or safety of the vehicle. It does not typically cover cosmetic damages. • Comprehensive coverage: If your ATV is damaged by something other than a collision–such as a fire comprehensive insurance can provide coverage for that damage. It can also cover permanent accessories attached to your ATV. • Uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage: If your ATV is hit by someone without insurance, uninsured coverage will help up to your coverage limit. • Medical payments coverage: ATVs can be dangerous. There were an estimated 115,000 ER visits from ATV injuries in 2010. ATV medical payments coverage pays for necessary medical treatments as a result of an ATV accident, no matter who is at fault, up to your coverage limits. Additional Considerations Here are some other considerations that Lawyer can walk you through as we put together an ATV policy that is right for you: • Some states require ATV liability insurance to ride on state-owned or public lands. • If you tow your ATV, make sure you understand your insurance policy and know what will be covered in case something goes wrong. Sometimes ATV insurance policies cover towed vehicles, though the coverage is limited to liability only. A policy on your trailer may be necessary to cover damages to your ATV while in transport. • Know your state’s regulations for insurance, safety, registration, and use. Different states have different laws regarding the age of riders, when and where ATVs can be used, and whether or not insurance or registration is required. • ATVs are designed for one rider. Multiple riders make controlling the ATV difficult, and the passenger doesn’t have a safe way to stay on. Unless your ATV is specifically built for two, do not allow passengers. • If you allow children under 18 to use ATVs, ensure they are using an ATV appropriate for their size, that they have been properly trained, and that they are wearing appropriate safety gear. Always supervise children on ATVs. • Never drink or use drugs while operating an ATV. • Remember that an ATV is a vehicle. Only travel at speeds that are safe for your experience levels, as well as the road conditions. • Let your Lawyer know if you use your ATV for commercial use or for racing. Your coverage needs will vary. • Wear ATV-approved helmets that are properly fitted, as well as other safety gear such as goggles, boots, gloves, pants, and long-sleeved shirts. • Take ATV training classes.
youtube
Protecting You and Your ATV Wheels
When it’s time to break out your four-wheeler and head out for a ride, the last thing you want on your mind is whether or not you are properly insured. With an All-Terrain Vehicle insurance policy from Advance Insurance, you can ride with confidence knowing that your quad is protected. We cover vehicles in Lindon, Salt Lake City, Provo, Las Vegas and surrounding communities. No matter whether you use an ATV, APV, UTV, dune buggy or a similarly four-wheeled vehicle, ATV Insurance offers several specialized coverage options, including: • Collision coverage for damage from rocks, trees, and other obstacles or debris. • Comprehensive coverage as additional security for loss or damage from theft, fire, or vandalism. • Property damage insurance to cover expenses to another person’s property for which you are liable. • Bodily injury to pay medical expenses to others if you are held liable in an accident. • Uninsured motorist insurance to protect you from loss or damage caused by uninsured and underinsured drivers.
The Utah’s Off-Highway Vehicle Program brochure outlines the basic responsibilities of ATV riders. The brochure covers registration, equipment, and operation requirements, safety tips, courtesy and ethics.
ATV Laws and Rules
• Wear Your Helmet: For riders and passengers under age 18, it’s the law, but we advise everyone to wear a helmet. It can save your life. Properly worn, a helmet won’t reduce vision or hearing and helps cut out windblast. • Gloves, abrasion resistant clothing, and over the ankle boots are also highly recommended • Youth, 8-15 years of age, must possess an ATV education certificate before operating an ATV on public land • Ride On Utah! – Ride only on designated routes and areas open to ATVs • Ride on the right side of the road and in single file • Be alert to oncoming traffic, especially on blind curves or in dips and crests of hills • It is illegal to drive an ATV while under the influence of alcohol or drugs • A red or orange “whip flag” must be attached to ATVs when riding in sand dune areas • Lights must be used between sunset and sunrise • Be sure your brakes will control and stop your ATV • Mufflers with an approved spark arrestor are required on all ATVs (snowmobiles do not require spark arrestors)
Report ATV Accidents
If you are involved in an ATV accident, help any other people involved in the accident and notify local law enforcement officers immediately by the quickest means of communication available. Give your name, address, and identification to any injured person or owner of property that is damaged in the accident. If anyone was injured or killed in the accident, submit a completed and signed ATV Accident. Report to the Utah Division of Parks and Recreation within 15 days. ATV accident forms are available from the Division of Parks and Recreation or any state parks ranger. Information in accident reports is confidential.
Why Are ATVs So Expensive?
Many new quad enthusiasts spend time looking at ATV videos and when they get tired of renting and are think buying their first quad, they are often shocked with the price. The truth is, ATVs can be a pricey acquisition. ATV are expensive because they were (and still are) used for lodging fertilizer and carrying tools on a farm, and because of their price markup in the US market, especially when talking about high-end brands. They are also used to plow snow. Even though nowadays ATVs are used for mostly recreational purposes, they are a useful tool you can find on most farms. Their strengths as a utility vehicle rise up prices. Many quad enthusiasts comment about the markup that new ATVs have in the US. an Alterra 500 can be had for hundreds of dollars cheaper in Europe or Australia compared to America.
youtube
How Can You Buy An ATV And Not Break The Bank?
One of the most important things to keep in mind when making a new purchase is to shop around as much as possible. There are some dealers which can be really helpful, trying to find you the ideal machine for your tastes, and there are others which will only see you as a giant money sign. That’s why it’s beneficial to compare prices between dealerships to try to get the best deal possible. Another important thing to keep in mind is that you will rarely pay full MSRP for an ATV unless it’s a hot new model. There is always a rebate going on. and even after that, they can easily shave hundreds off MSRP just to keep you interested in the product.
Experienced ATV Accident Attorneys in Lindon
ATV accident incidents vary depending on the nature and type of vehicles involved, the people injured, the intensity of the injuries sustained and the collision, and the traffic rules actually violated. Te ATV attorneys in Lindon will effectively all these details and appropriately determine the amount you deserve in compensation from the negligent party’s insurance company. Unlike the experienced ATV accident ATV attorneys in Utah, an ordinary ATV accident lawyer may not successfully defend your rights by taking on multinational insurance companies with the aim of minimizing losses incurred in insurance claims. This is the principal reason why you need the services of highly experienced Lindon ATV accident lawyers. They will deal with your case with the best of wit and obtain reasonable compensation in damage even when there is no visible damage on your vehicle after a collision. All that matters is evidence of the collision. The best ATV accident attorneys in Lindon are respected in Utah for successfully suing and winning even car accident cases with the lowest impact magnitude. Therefore, you are assured that they will provide you with top-notch legal representation in a court of law and lodge a claim for damages to your car and the injuries you sustained in the accident
Lindon Utah ATV Accident Attorney Free Consultation
When you need legal help with an ATV accident and injury in Lindon Utah, please call Ascent Law LLC for your free consultation (801) 676-5506. We want to help you.
Ascent Law LLC 8833 S. Redwood Road, Suite C West Jordan, Utah 84088 United States Telephone: (801) 676-5506
Ascent Law LLC
4.9 stars – based on 67 reviews
Recent Posts
How Does Bankruptcy Restructuring Work?
Divorce And Domestic Violence
Which Visitation Schedule Is Right?
Divorce News
I Was In A Car Accident, Now What?
Pros And Cons Of Asset Protection
Source: https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/atv-accident-lawyer-lindon-utah/
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ATV Accident Lawyer Lindon Utah
Lindon was established as a settlement in 1861 by pioneer families. It was named after the Linden tree but the spelling was mistakenly written as “Lindon”, which became the official spelling. Growing rapidly in the late 1990’s and through the first decade of the 21st century, the little country town is now a bedroom community for over 10,000 residents. Lindon is well known in the Emergency Preparedness community throughout the United States due to First Place City Preparedness awards in 2009, 2010 and 2011 for any city of any size. The awards are based on city, business, school and resident preparedness planning and involvement in an annual citywide emergency drill in addition to a high-level of involvement in preparedness as a way of life for residents, businesses and city governmental departments.
The city motto Lindon – A little bit o’ country represents the relaxed nature of the community where almost all residential lots are 5 acre or larger and include animal rights. Lindon has an abundant cultural and historical background. Originally settled in 1861, Lindon began as pioneers moved into what was then the Lindon grazing land. The town was originally named “String Town” because of the way the houses were strung up and down the street between the towns of Orem and Pleasant Grove. An old linden tree (Tilia) growing in town in 1901 inspired the present (misspelled) name. Over the past century Lindon has seen organized development, but it has tried to remain true to its motto: “Lindon: a little bit of country”. Lindon, Utah’s estimated population is 10,970 according to the most recent United States census estimates. Lindon, Utah is the 55th largest city in Utah based on official 2017 estimates from the US Census Bureau. The overall median age is 27 years, 27 years for males, and 27 years for females. For every 100 females there are 92.6 males.
According to the most recent ACS, the racial composition of Lindon Utah was: • White: 93.63% • Two or more races: 2.95% • Asian: 1.38% • Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.93% • Other race: 0.85% • Black or African American: 0.25% • Native American: 0.00%
Pros of Living in Lindon • Attractive setting • Educated population • Future job growth Cons of Living in Lindon • Rising living costs • Some air quality issues • Growth and sprawl
Economy in Lindon, Utah
Lindon has an unemployment rate of 2.8%. The US average is 3.9%. Lindon has seen the job market increase by 2.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 51.7%, which is higher than the US average of 33.5%.
Tax Rates for Lindon
• The Sales Tax Rate for Lindon is 6.9%. The US average is 7.3%. • The Income Tax Rate for Lindon is 5.0%. The US average is 4.6%. • Tax Rates can have a big impact when Comparing Cost of Living. • The average income of a Lindon resident is $22,990 a year. The US average is $28,555 a year. • The Median household income of a Lindon resident is $83,182 a year. The US average is $53,482 a year.
Cost of Living in Lindon, Utah
Our cost of living indices are based on a US average of 100. An amount below 100 means Lindon is cheaper than the US average. A cost of living index above 100 means Lindon, Utah is more expensive. When you use your ATV to go for a ride on those backcountry trails, discover the best hunting spot, or head across the field on your farm, you can rest assured you have the insurance protection you need should an accident occur. Many people think their homeowners’ policy will provide the protection they need for their ATV activities, but a homeowner’s policy is simply not enough. The coverage provided by a homeowner’s policy may limit your coverage to liability, or it may only cover your ATV if you drive it on your property. You need coverage that can go everywhere you venture and protect you against your specific ATV risks.
Insurance for ATVs
• Liability Coverage: Liability insurance is often required to drive on public or state lands. ATV liability insurance covers damage to someone else’s property or if someone else is injured. ATV liability insurance, however, doesn’t cover injury or damage to you or your property. • Collision coverage: ATVs can go almost anywhere unfortunately, those “all terrain” moments sometimes end in a collision. If an accident does occur, you’ll be glad you had collision insurance. Collision insurance covers damage to your ATV that affects the operation or safety of the vehicle. It does not typically cover cosmetic damages. • Comprehensive coverage: If your ATV is damaged by something other than a collision–such as a fire comprehensive insurance can provide coverage for that damage. It can also cover permanent accessories attached to your ATV. • Uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage: If your ATV is hit by someone without insurance, uninsured coverage will help up to your coverage limit. • Medical payments coverage: ATVs can be dangerous. There were an estimated 115,000 ER visits from ATV injuries in 2010. ATV medical payments coverage pays for necessary medical treatments as a result of an ATV accident, no matter who is at fault, up to your coverage limits. Additional Considerations Here are some other considerations that Lawyer can walk you through as we put together an ATV policy that is right for you: • Some states require ATV liability insurance to ride on state-owned or public lands. • If you tow your ATV, make sure you understand your insurance policy and know what will be covered in case something goes wrong. Sometimes ATV insurance policies cover towed vehicles, though the coverage is limited to liability only. A policy on your trailer may be necessary to cover damages to your ATV while in transport. • Know your state’s regulations for insurance, safety, registration, and use. Different states have different laws regarding the age of riders, when and where ATVs can be used, and whether or not insurance or registration is required. • ATVs are designed for one rider. Multiple riders make controlling the ATV difficult, and the passenger doesn’t have a safe way to stay on. Unless your ATV is specifically built for two, do not allow passengers. • If you allow children under 18 to use ATVs, ensure they are using an ATV appropriate for their size, that they have been properly trained, and that they are wearing appropriate safety gear. Always supervise children on ATVs. • Never drink or use drugs while operating an ATV. • Remember that an ATV is a vehicle. Only travel at speeds that are safe for your experience levels, as well as the road conditions. • Let your Lawyer know if you use your ATV for commercial use or for racing. Your coverage needs will vary. • Wear ATV-approved helmets that are properly fitted, as well as other safety gear such as goggles, boots, gloves, pants, and long-sleeved shirts. • Take ATV training classes.
Protecting You and Your ATV Wheels
When it’s time to break out your four-wheeler and head out for a ride, the last thing you want on your mind is whether or not you are properly insured. With an All-Terrain Vehicle insurance policy from Advance Insurance, you can ride with confidence knowing that your quad is protected. We cover vehicles in Lindon, Salt Lake City, Provo, Las Vegas and surrounding communities. No matter whether you use an ATV, APV, UTV, dune buggy or a similarly four-wheeled vehicle, ATV Insurance offers several specialized coverage options, including: • Collision coverage for damage from rocks, trees, and other obstacles or debris. • Comprehensive coverage as additional security for loss or damage from theft, fire, or vandalism. • Property damage insurance to cover expenses to another person’s property for which you are liable. • Bodily injury to pay medical expenses to others if you are held liable in an accident. • Uninsured motorist insurance to protect you from loss or damage caused by uninsured and underinsured drivers.
The Utah’s Off-Highway Vehicle Program brochure outlines the basic responsibilities of ATV riders. The brochure covers registration, equipment, and operation requirements, safety tips, courtesy and ethics.
ATV Laws and Rules
• Wear Your Helmet: For riders and passengers under age 18, it’s the law, but we advise everyone to wear a helmet. It can save your life. Properly worn, a helmet won’t reduce vision or hearing and helps cut out windblast. • Gloves, abrasion resistant clothing, and over the ankle boots are also highly recommended • Youth, 8-15 years of age, must possess an ATV education certificate before operating an ATV on public land • Ride On Utah! – Ride only on designated routes and areas open to ATVs • Ride on the right side of the road and in single file • Be alert to oncoming traffic, especially on blind curves or in dips and crests of hills • It is illegal to drive an ATV while under the influence of alcohol or drugs • A red or orange “whip flag” must be attached to ATVs when riding in sand dune areas • Lights must be used between sunset and sunrise • Be sure your brakes will control and stop your ATV • Mufflers with an approved spark arrestor are required on all ATVs (snowmobiles do not require spark arrestors)
Report ATV Accidents
If you are involved in an ATV accident, help any other people involved in the accident and notify local law enforcement officers immediately by the quickest means of communication available. Give your name, address, and identification to any injured person or owner of property that is damaged in the accident. If anyone was injured or killed in the accident, submit a completed and signed ATV Accident. Report to the Utah Division of Parks and Recreation within 15 days. ATV accident forms are available from the Division of Parks and Recreation or any state parks ranger. Information in accident reports is confidential.
Why Are ATVs So Expensive?
Many new quad enthusiasts spend time looking at ATV videos and when they get tired of renting and are think buying their first quad, they are often shocked with the price. The truth is, ATVs can be a pricey acquisition. ATV are expensive because they were (and still are) used for lodging fertilizer and carrying tools on a farm, and because of their price markup in the US market, especially when talking about high-end brands. They are also used to plow snow. Even though nowadays ATVs are used for mostly recreational purposes, they are a useful tool you can find on most farms. Their strengths as a utility vehicle rise up prices. Many quad enthusiasts comment about the markup that new ATVs have in the US. an Alterra 500 can be had for hundreds of dollars cheaper in Europe or Australia compared to America.
How Can You Buy An ATV And Not Break The Bank?
One of the most important things to keep in mind when making a new purchase is to shop around as much as possible. There are some dealers which can be really helpful, trying to find you the ideal machine for your tastes, and there are others which will only see you as a giant money sign. That’s why it’s beneficial to compare prices between dealerships to try to get the best deal possible. Another important thing to keep in mind is that you will rarely pay full MSRP for an ATV unless it’s a hot new model. There is always a rebate going on. and even after that, they can easily shave hundreds off MSRP just to keep you interested in the product.
Experienced ATV Accident Attorneys in Lindon
ATV accident incidents vary depending on the nature and type of vehicles involved, the people injured, the intensity of the injuries sustained and the collision, and the traffic rules actually violated. Te ATV attorneys in Lindon will effectively all these details and appropriately determine the amount you deserve in compensation from the negligent party’s insurance company. Unlike the experienced ATV accident ATV attorneys in Utah, an ordinary ATV accident lawyer may not successfully defend your rights by taking on multinational insurance companies with the aim of minimizing losses incurred in insurance claims. This is the principal reason why you need the services of highly experienced Lindon ATV accident lawyers. They will deal with your case with the best of wit and obtain reasonable compensation in damage even when there is no visible damage on your vehicle after a collision. All that matters is evidence of the collision. The best ATV accident attorneys in Lindon are respected in Utah for successfully suing and winning even car accident cases with the lowest impact magnitude. Therefore, you are assured that they will provide you with top-notch legal representation in a court of law and lodge a claim for damages to your car and the injuries you sustained in the accident
Lindon Utah ATV Accident Attorney Free Consultation
When you need legal help with an ATV accident and injury in Lindon Utah, please call Ascent Law LLC for your free consultation (801) 676-5506. We want to help you.
Ascent Law LLC 8833 S. Redwood Road, Suite C West Jordan, Utah 84088 United States Telephone: (801) 676-5506
Ascent Law LLC
4.9 stars – based on 67 reviews
Recent Posts
How Does Bankruptcy Restructuring Work?
Divorce And Domestic Violence
Which Visitation Schedule Is Right?
Divorce News
I Was In A Car Accident, Now What?
Pros And Cons Of Asset Protection
from https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/atv-accident-lawyer-lindon-utah/
from Criminal Defense Lawyer West Jordan Utah - Blog http://criminaldefenselawyerwestjordanutah.weebly.com/blog/atv-accident-lawyer-lindon-utah
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