A sad, but VERY important story from the AJC about a local police officer that was hit alongside the road during a traffic stop.IT IS GEORGIA LAW when you see an emergency vehicle alongside the road or freeway that you are to move one lane away (left or right depending on where it is) if at all possible, or SLOW DOWN!!!! Imagine this being your husband/wife/significant other……
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Cobb County police officer Andrew Singleton saw the headlights coming toward him, but there was nowhere he could go.
“The only thing I could do was jump,” Singleton said at his Marietta home Monday night. “I jumped and tried to get on top of the car, but I didn’t make it.”
Singleton doesn’t remember the impact. But he remembers hitting the ground. And now he’s got the fractured wrist, foot and knee to prove it. Doctors believe he could have additional injuries, too, such as tendon damage, Singleton said.
Singleton was hit late Thursday night by a suspected drunk driver as he was getting back into his patrol car following a traffic stop. Monday evening, he spoke with reporters for the first time about the incident.
“I’m doing about as well as I can be doing,” said Singleton, who sustained multiple injuries when he was struck.
That driver, Irving Alicea, initially continued driving north on Cobb Parkway, but was stopped about 20 minutes later. Alicea was arrested and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, failure to move over for an emergency vehicle and felony hit-and-run. The 40-year-old, who was not injured, was released Friday morning on $30,000 bond, jail records indicate.
Singleton, a 30-year-old father of three, said he wanted to let people know that injuries like his could be avoided if drivers obeyed a law already in the place.
“If you see an emergency vehicle stopped on the road, you’re supposed to move over one lane, or be prepared to stop,” Singleton said. “If we have that lane, it’s so much safer.”
Singleton, who has been a Cobb officer for nearly eight years, said he is planning to return to his job, but he’s not sure when that will happen. Until then, he’s grateful that his injuries aren’t more severe and hopes drivers can learn from his ordeal.
“Police officers are fairly normal people,” he said. “And if you move over and give us that lane, we can come home.”
— Reporter Pete Combs, with AM750 and now 95.5FM News/Talk WSB, contributed to this report.
Jennifer Garner Films ‘Odd Life of Timothy Green’
In case you have been wondering where I’ve been the past two days…..
Jennifer Garner gets to work on her latest film, The Odd Life of Timothy Green, on Friday (March 18) in Atlanta, Georgia.
The 38-year-old actress plays Cindy Green in the movie, which also stars Ron Livingston, Joel Edgerton, Dianne Wiest, and Rosemarie DeWitt.
Synopsis: A childless couple bury a box in their backyard, containing all of their wishes for an infant. Soon, a child is born, though Timothy Green is not all that he appears.
You can next see Jennifer on the big screen in Arthur, which hits theaters on April 8!
Photos: Flynet
Story Compliments of justjared.buzznet.com
Going Green – Low-Cost Ways for Apartment Dwellers to Be Eco-Friendly | RISMedia
RISMEDIA, March 17, 2011—(MCT)—So you’re a renter and you want to green your space, but your landlord won’t splurge on solar panels. Don’t fret. There are plenty of low-cost ways for apartment dwellers to be eco-friendly.
You can be a green tenant by unplugging appliances or using chemical-free products. It’s as easy as fixing leaky faucets or installing window treatments to conserve heat in the winter and to keep your place cool in the summer without cranking up the air conditioning.
Gas Prices and Real Estate…How and When Will It Effect Us!
Note: I originally wrote this post in May, 2008. Funny how things have a way of repeating themselves. It still makes sense to buy Midtown Atlanta Real Estate if you work in Midtown Atlanta, Downtown or parts of Buckhead…you can walk or ride the MARTA train to work!
I’ve been thinking about this post for a couple days. Then, when I saw the gas price at my local Quik Trip jump $.16 in just two days from $3.59 to $3.75, I said, “Self…we gotta do something about this. What is another question.”
Well….for one thing, we don’t go for any Sunday drives in our classic car anymore. (Actually she has other issues…but we won’t go there today!) But, I think she makes 10mpg, maybe……Sorry Wilma, you’re staying in the driveway for now.
Then, I read an interesting story on Yahoo this morning about a man who is not buying any gas for 31 days! Check out the story! He’s riding a bike 18 miles roundtrip to work! Good for him!
I actually have 3 cars, and a pickup. The convertible is not moving, I only use my truck once a week to pickup things, my Mercedes is not moving, and my Sonata is the only car that gets driven.
Buying Midtown Atlanta Real Estate , or moving is not a decision that is made on a whim. But I have to wonder, what will it take for the real estate consumer to make a living change, and move closer to work. Atlanta now ranks #1 in the worst commuting times in the U.S. (Not a rank we are proud of…at least not me!) Will it take $6 a gallon gas to change people’s minds and the way we conduct our lives? Apparently NOT!
The New York Times ran an article last week on Gas Prices and Mass Transit! IN New York, the transit authority reported ridership up by more than 5% for the first 3 months of the year! Denver, out of all places, up 8% in the first 3 months!
Hmmm….that train is looking pretty good right about now!
But for us REALTORS, kinda hard to show property on a train, right? Well yes, but for someone like me that does mostly urban areas like Midtown Atlanta, I make a point to show my Buyers HOW CLOSE they are to a MARTA station!
As for my own personal use, I think twice about going to the office from my house (I have a condo which is walkable) unless I have to.
And you can bet, that Buyer is qualified before they get in the car and I show them any Midtown Atlanta Real Estate!
(Climb up on Soap Box) Everyone should not buy gas for ONE DAY! Just ONE DAY! See what happens to the gas price. (Climb off Soap Box)
I’m thinking people will dump the SUV before they will sell their house. But then again, as I ride down the freeway with that SUV next to me with the New Car tag on it, I’m thinking….you don’t get it do you?
Gas Prices and Real Estate…it’s effecting us now, and for sometime to come!
Anyone want to go bike shopping with me? Or maybe a Moped?
Short Sales are the Answer
Phillip really hits the nail on the head with regards to banks needing to change they way they do business. Hello? Have we brokers not changed how we do business (i.e. Internet, etc)
Banks would do well to look at their process and make some serious changes….or at least we can wish, right?
Thanks Phillip!
I am going to bang a drum I have been banging since the sub prime crisis in 2007 began to erode the equity of so many people, and it is simple: if the housing market is going to recover, we have to have to do better than a 20th century solution to our 21st century problem. We are facing the largest liquidation of property in the history of the republic, yet banks are doing nothing differently to dispense with their toxic assets than they were in the 1930’s, which is to foreclose, repossess, and dump.
I would strongly assert, having worked with default properties a chunk of my career, that short sales are the answer to restoring the market to equilibrium and recovery, and yet lenders still have to be dragged kicking and screaming to the closing table when they ironically net far less after far longer on the REO side, where they are suddenly in a ridiculous hurry.
The advantages are enormous:
- In a short sale, the bank doesn’t have to take 1-2 years to repossess the home. They avoid having a non-performing asset any longer than they have to. They get their money faster.
- In a short sale, there are no legal fees associated with a foreclosure. They save money.
- In a short sale, the bank does not have to manage the property, put the utilities in their name, or winterize the property except in rare cases. No preservation company expenses, property management overhead, winterizations or utility costs. They save carrying costs.
- No evictions. Short sales are seldom boarded up, vandalized, or vacant. They therefore net the lender more money.
- No sheriffs deeds, no right of redemption headaches.
- No title ambiguities, which is a big concern in the wake of the foreclosure moratorium.
The short sales help the borrowers as well, because they are able to dispense with the property with dignity, avoid the credit catastrophe of a foreclosure, and re-enter the pool of buyers far sooner and with less shell shock and trauma the rest of their lives.
Sadly, the architecture of lenders is still that of 15, 25 and 50 years ago: None of the brighter bulbs work in liquidation or loss mitigation, and the staff on the REO side is the only part of their workforce motivated to sell and close. That is fine when foreclosures and distress are rare and relegated to deadbeats, but the USA didn’t become a nation of deadbeats in the last 18 months, we had our bank accounts raided. We lost our jobs. We lost our equity. And folks deserve better than hourly grunts who lose faxes, watch clocks, and treat red tape like a badge of honor.
Moreover, the American people deserve executives who can show a modicum of remorse or contrition for their royal screw up, are willing to change their corporate culture to adapt to the need for more short sales in a shorter time frame, and, maybe, just maybe, stop referring to the property in abstract terms like “assets” when they should instead understand that these are their lifeblood customers, and the “asset” is that lifeblood’s home.
It is a shame that there is no political will on either side of the isle to hold lenders feet to the fire to affect meaningful change, and defaulted homeowners must contend with a mad race to work a miracle with an uncaring, unresponsive monolithic entity before that monster forecloses, repossesses their home, wrecks their credit and crushes their dreams. This is not progress.
We Are Westchester County & Hudson Valley NY Real Estate. Reach Phil at (914) 723-8900.
- J. Philip Faranda, Broker-owner, J. Philip Real Estate, LLC. Vice President, Empire Access Multiple Listing Service.
- I am one of New York’s premier short sale REALTORS, serving Westchester & the Hudson Valley.
- J. Philip Serves Briarcliff Manor, Ossining, Croton, the River Towns, Westchester County, and the bedroom counties of New York City.
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Saving Money At The Gas Pump –Yes Midtown Atlanta!
When you live in such a walkable community as Midtown Atlanta, you might not use your car as often as the rest of us do. (Everyday vs. maybe a couple times a week?)
So when you make a trip to the gas station with our current rocket ride of gas prices, you are going to be in for some real sticker shock. Frankly, I’m afraid to look at my local Quik Trip board when I drive by for fear another $.10 will have been added to the prices.
So, WHO does NOT want to save money? And we might as well start with the gas! My good friend and fellow real estate peep, Connie Harvey in Nashville, TN posted a great blog about ways to save on gas. I certainly learned somethings I did not know.
Take a quick look at her post, and keep these tips in mind the next time you head to the station.
As an additional service to my readers, I’ve added a link under Local Resources to the left here to GasBuddy.com. A great resource to know where the cheap gas is! Of course, be careful where you buy gas so you don’t get some crud that screws up your car. But places like Costco, Kroger and Sam’s Club have a pretty good reputation.
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