Olympus-OM
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [OM] IMG: The Ball Sees All

Subject: Re: [OM] IMG: The Ball Sees All
From: Jim Nichols <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 22 Jan 2017 09:00:33 -0600
Thanks for the detailed explanation. I suspect that about all the county ID does here is to give the patrolling officers a quick indication that the car is an "outsider", and perhaps bears watching. Or, maybe I'm just naturally suspicious. Cars, but not trucks, must be registered in the owner's county of residence.

There are also fiefdoms. When I came to Tennessee after being stationed at Wright-Patterson AFB in Ohio, a bank in Dayton still held a lien on my car. Tennessee law required me to register the car in Tennessee within a specified period of time. The local county clerk would not sell me a license plate because of the lien. I drove fifteen miles to Lynchburg, the county seat of Moore County, home to the Jack Daniels distillery, and interrupted the checker game at the courthouse to get their clerk to sell me a plate.

Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA

On 1/22/2017 12:46 AM, Moose wrote:
On 1/20/2017 3:09 PM, Jim Nichols wrote:
Glad to hear that Calif. is frugal, as well. The plastic stickers discolor fairly quickly. Perhaps Calif. doesn't worry about county ID strips.

The importance of counties, politically, administratively and culturally, varies a great deal across the US. We had a tour of the offices of Portland Co, ME. with a friend who was a county commissioner. I was amazed at how inconsequential counties are there. They have courts and a jail and do other minor administrative things. Virtually all sub-state government power is in townships. Unlike the West, virtually all land is in townships that are geographically much larger than the towns in them. If a township doesn't like the county it is in, a referendum can move it to another one.

In Calif, counties are important, and some are huge, and/or have huge populations. They run courts, collect taxes and apportion those due back to cities and provide all services for the large areas outside the incorporated cities within them. I think that's a lot like the Midwest and South. But very few have any social/cultural significance. People speak of Napa Valley, not the County. Lake County is about the only one that comes to mind as a reference. There are some sub county differentiation; West Marin is a part of Marin County that is culturally and politically quite different than the rest, for example.

Jut a couple of miles from us, you drive from Alameda County into Contra Costa County, but there's no sense of change or difference, nor have I known anyone who seems to think there's any difference of note. There are other administrative oddities about, as well. When you cross that line out of the City of Berkeley, you enter an unincorporated part of CC County, but everyone calls it Kensington, and it doesn't rely on most county services. It has (is?) what it calls a Service District, that has police and fire departments, maintains roads, etc. All it uses the County for is courts and county jail.

Putting the county name on license plates here just wouldn't mean anything to most folks.

Differentiated Moose


--
_________________________________________________________________
Options: http://lists.thomasclausen.net/mailman/listinfo/olympus
Archives: http://lists.thomasclausen.net/mailman/private/olympus/
Themed Olympus Photo Exhibition: http://www.tope.nl/

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Sponsored by Tako
Impressum | Datenschutz