
www.Usenet.com
| <-- __Chronological__ --> | <-- __Thread__ --> |
I think the key word in VC21966 is the word "adequate". If you fight this, you have the opportunity to bring skating into the 21st century as an alternative form of transportation in Cupertino. I have been involved with issues like these many times. I helped create VC21969. It states that a local authority may adopt rules and regulations by ordinance regulating persons engaged in roller skating on a highway, sidewalk, or roadway. In 1977, some skates still had steel wheels. There were hardly any video games. Polyurethane was just beginning to be used to make skate wheels as we know today. Go ahead and bring the knuckle draggers out of the stone age. This is a fight that skaters everywhere need to take on. "ALT" lanes, not just bike lanes. I'll help any way I can. D. Miles Jr. The GodFather of Skating "FNGuy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Bob Cardone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > > Get in Touch with IISA and see what they can do to help you. > > Yes, what Bob said. Get some .org legal muscle in your corner--it's a > great case with many potential beneficiaries. (And the public harm is > WHAT, exactly, Mr. Constable?) > > > > > All the stuff happening in California, and they are worried about > > skaters in a Bike Lane.. > > > > Unreal. > > Well, look on the bright side, Cupertino MUST be a low crime area for such > nitpicking law enforcement to be going on. Unless it's just more revenue > fleecing by desperate red-inked city.gov ;')
| <-- __Chronological__ --> | <-- __Thread__ --> |