Driver License Report
Monday, December 27th, 2010The Penny Trade Reports Its Stock Update on (GreenHouse Holdings GRHU) and (DouglasLake Minerals inc DLKM)
HOT STOCK ALERTS (http://thepennytrade.com)
OTCQB:GRHU)
GreenHouse Holdings, Inc. (OTCQB:GRHU) a leading provider of energy efficiency solutions and sustainable infrastructure products, has entered into a strategic partnership with ImageWare Systems, Inc. (Pinksheets:IWSY - News) to provide sustainability and security products and services to government, military and law enforcement agencies, domestically and internationally.
GreenHouse's 1-Link™ service will now be part of the ImageWare Law Enforcement solution package that is being offered to over 20,000 law enforcement agencies in the United States. In turn, GreenHouse agreed to provide opportunities for IWS within the military and government markets for ImageWare biometric identity management solutions which will be included in the 1-Link platform along with other GreenHouse-offered products and services.
1-Link™, in use today at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, integrates existing systems and provides enterprise-wide real-time access to data, voice, video, maps, incidents, management reports and resource information using existing infrastructure such as personal computers and mobile devices over TCP/IP, cellular and radio networks. 1-Link™ can integrate a single agency from the director to the field and can integrate multiple agencies. Each agency selects the information that agency will share securely within and across partner agencies. 1-Link™is a scalable, modular, multi-lingual integrated platform for multiple agencies including healthcare systems, harbors, airports, police, fire, emergency medical services, emergency management agencies, education and other public and private agencies.
ImageWare Systems, Inc. is a leading developer of identity management solutions, providing biometric, secure credential and law enforcement technologies. Scalable for worldwide deployment, the Company's biometric product line includes a multi-biometric engine that is hardware and algorithm independent, enabling the enrollment and management of unlimited population sizes. ImageWare's identification products are used to manage and issue secure credentials including national IDs, passports, driver licenses, smart cards and access control credentials. ImageWare's digital booking products provide law enforcement with integrated mug shot, fingerprint Livescan and investigative capabilities. ImageWare is headquartered in San Diego, with offices in Portland, OR, Washington DC and Canada.
GreenHouse Holdings, Inc. is a leading provider of energy efficiency solutions and sustainable infrastructure products. The Company designs, engineers and installs disparate products and technologies that produce persistent technical and financial results, by enabling our clients to monitor and control their energy costs in the most efficient manner possible. Its target markets for energy efficiency solutions include residential, commercial and industrial, as well as government and military markets. In addition, the Company develops, designs and constructs rapidly deployable, sustainable infrastructure primarily for use in disaster relief and security in austere regions
-----------------------------------------------------------
HOT STOCK ALERTS (http://thepennytrade.com)
Douglas Lake Minerals Inc., (DLKM.OB) is pleased to announce that it has filed a Canadian National Instrument 43-101 Standards for Disclosure of Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101) Technical Report (the "Technical Report") for its Handeni Project. Douglas Lake's 100% owned Handeni Project consists of four prospecting licenses covering approximately 800 square kilometers in the newly developing goldfields of Eastern Tanzania. Douglas Lake filed the Technical Report with the British Columbia Securities Commission via the System for Electronic Document Analysis and Retrieval (SEDAR).
The Technical Report was prepared by Dr. Reyno Scheepers, Ph.D., Pr.Sci.Nat., a South African based consulting geologist and a director of the Company who fulfills the requirements to be a 'Qualified Person' for the purposes of NI 43-101.
The Technical Report details the results of exploration activities conducted by IPP Resources, the previous holding company of the area. Extensive geophysical and geologic work was conducted over several field seasons from 2008. The work included prospecting, rock and soil sampling, and a ground magnetic survey. All geochemical analytical work was conducted by internationally accredited labs, SGS Laboratories and/or Humac Laboratories in Mwanza, Tanzania.
The exploration also included a fixed-wing aeromagnetic and radiometric survey. The survey and interpretation was conducted according to internationally accepted standards by the Council for Geoscience, South Africa. The Technical Report identified and selected a total of 12 priority gold targets which are recommended for follow up work.
"The scale of work covered by the Technical Report has significantly advanced Douglas Lake's Handeni Project," Harp Sangha, Chief Executive Officer comments, "We now have a number of very exciting gold targets which we are a priority for us to follow up with further exploration in 2011."
The Company is an emerging mineral exploration company focused on exploring and developing mining opportunities in Tanzania. For more information, go to www.douglaslakeminerals.com
About Thepennytrade.com alerts
The Top Stocks Alerts is one of the leading Top penny stocks web sites; it presents daily stocks to watch (Midday Movers) everyday. Its new and innovative penny stocks alerts newsletters allows investors to receive stocks alerts, and it has become the most trusted penny stocks alerts on the web.
Thepennytrade.com also provides a wide-ranging due diligence and insight on stocks all over the market. The Stock Alarm Investment Top Stock Reports primary focus is to alert Thepennytrade.com valued subscribers to small cap and micro cap companies poised for explosive movement in the market. Timing in the market is critical! To receive Thepennytrade.com free comprehensive newsletter, please visit Thepennytrade.com
Follow http://Thepennytrade.com on Twitter:http://twitter.com/STOCKSWAGER
Sitemap: http://www.thepennytrade.com/sitemap.xml
Disclaimer:
The assembled information distributed by Thepennytrade.com is for information purposes only, and is neither a solicitation to buy nor an offer to sell securities. Thepennytrade.com does expect that investors will buy and sell securities based on information assembled and presented herein. Thepennytrade.com will not be responsible in any way for or accept any liability for any losses arising from an investor's reliance on or use of information obtained from our website or emails. PLEASE always do your own due diligence, and consult your financial advisor.
HOT STOCK ALERTS (http://thepennytrade.com)
About the Author
Penny Stocks Newsletter Alerts Hot Otc Stocks on Real time
HOT STOCK ALERTS (http://thepennytrade.com)
Penny Stocks Alerts On Twitter Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/STOCKSWAGER
How to report driver w/ no license and expired tags?
I live in CA, and have a neighbor who has NO car insurance, license and expired tags. I find this completely unfair and hate how she brags about it. How can I report this? Can I call the non-emergency line?
Thanks for any helpful answers!!
Call the police on the non-emergency line. Give them the vehicle, the tag number, the address and the driver. If she's taking her kids in the car when she's driving, tell them that, too. That's potentially child endangerment.
Eventually, she will be caught. Cops and courts are not kind to those who chose to drive without a license or insurance.
Driver License Report
Asian-American groups in Atlanta unite against SB 67 driver's license bill. WAGA-TV report
Asia's Worst Drivers
Drivers are doing crazy things all across Asia. They back into oncoming traffic and stop on busy roads to chat with friends on the sidewalk. They eat pork buns and fill in business reports behind the wheel. They speed. They drive drunk, and they fall asleep at the wheel.
Here are the five countries with the worst vehicular horrors:
No.5: Thailand
Many cars in Thailand have an amulet on their rear view mirrors or dashboards with an image of Buddha and a verse intended to protect driver and passengers from harm. Two-thirds of Thailand's registered vehicles are motorcycles, and many of their riders ignore the country's helmet law. Automobile seat belts weren't required until October 1997. Just 1773 people were arrested in all of Thailand for drunk driving in 1996. The figure was so embarrassingly low in a country with 11.8 million licensed drivers that authorities launched a full-scale anti-drunk driving campaign in late 1997.
Some Thai drivers never think twice about stopping in the middle of a road, whether it's an expressway or a narrow side street.
Reckless driving is common, particularly among long-haul truck drivers who work long hours. The U.S. Embassy warns in its country report on Thailand that visitors should be aware that "consumption of amphetamines or other stimulants by commercial drivers is common. It follows that warning with a bit of scary advice: " Congested roads and a scarcity of ambulances can make it difficult for accident victims to receive timely medical attention."
No.4: Indonesia
The most dangerous drivers in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta seem to be the ones who get paid to shuttle the public. Minibuses, dubbed Red Devils, serve as the primary source of transit. But green-and-white Kopaja buses often ply the same routes as the Red Devils - rumbling wheel-to-wheel in a cut-throat chase for customers. People with shorter distances to go and less money to spend hop aboard bajays, three-wheel scooters that dark in and out of traffic like annoying gnats. Then there is the army of vans known as Colts, which stop anywhere, anytime to pick-up and disgorge passengers. A major problem in Indonesia is the extraordinary number of unlicensed drivers. In 1996, the last year for which statistics are available, there were only 3.2 million drivers licensed to operate 14.8 million registered vehicles. Fifty percent of the drivers understand the rules and the other 50 percent don't care about them.
No.3: Korea
Each year 25,000 accidents (one out of every ten) involve drivers who have been drinking. That one reason Korea has one of the highest traffic fatality rates in the world on a per capita basis. In 1996, the last year for which statistics are available, 12, 653 Koreans died in traffic mishaps. That was 28.1 deaths for every 10,000 people - drivers as well as non-drivers. Japan, Taiwan and Australia, by comparison, recorded fewer than two deaths per 10,000 population. Twenty-five thousand seven hundred sixty-four traffic accidents were alcohol-related in 1996. Compare that to China, another country feared for its drunk drivers. Only 4508 accidents were formally listed as alcohol-related in China in 1997.
There can be no mistaking the Korean drivers who are trying to make it home every night in a deadly alcoholic fog. A travel advisory issued by the U.S. Embassy in Seoul warned visitors of the dangers that await them: "Problems include excessive speed, frequent lane changes, running of red lights, aggressive bus drivers and weaving motorcycles."
No.2: India
Welcome to India - a country where even the most basic road safety features are luxuries.
The lax safety standards take a deadly toll: India accounts for more than 10 percent of the world's traffic fatalities each year while having only about as many vehicles as Thailand and Taiwan combined.
One reason for the staggering death rate is simple: Speed kills. "Delhi's traffic is one of the fastest-moving in the world. The city's drivers often do 50 miles per hour. Studies consistently show that death rates soar disproportionately with speed.
Bombay and Calcutta average fewer than 400 traffic deaths per year, which is roughly equal to the fatalities in London. But Delhi averages more than 2000 a year.
Nowhere in Asia does a stoplight feel more like the starting grid of a grand prix race than in Delhi. Engines whine and squeal. Clutches whir and pop. Brakes and nerves strain as scores for jockey for advantage. And almost invariably the race begins long before the light turns green. Red traffic signals in Delhi encourage drivers to "relax". The double warning of a red light and a written message does nothing to hold back the tide of vehicles. The worst offenders for speeding and jumping red lights are young, affluent drivers known with a sneer as "the Maruti culture". They drive small, but speedy Marutis made by the Suzuki Company of Japan. Maruti means "god of wind", and the little cars easily outmaneuver the anti-quated Indian-made Ambassadors that were the staple of Indian roads for decades. The vehicular generation gap spawns so much anger that one Indian newspaper devoted an entire page to the 'road rage" sweeping India.
Back in New Delhi, the roads clear and traffic revs up, but soon everything grinds to a halt yet again. Workers are edging into an intersection, erecting a red tent that spills half into the turn lane. The tent is for a wedding and the space is simply being appropriated.
No.1: China
Driving is the downside of the mainland's amazing economic explosion. One of the China's biggest traffic problems is the bitter clash between the present and the past - between the automobile and the bicycle. Most of Beijing's 11 million residents still get around by bicycle or bus. And all those bicycles are fighting an often-deadly battle for space on the roads. Beijing and other cities across China have set aside special lanes for bicycles. That's fine when everyone is moving in one direction, but inevitably some bicycles have to across the street. And that's when the wars are fought, and often lost. Nights are scary in Beijing. With less traffic on the roads, frustrated drivers are free to go faster. And there is also the problem of nighttime entertainment. A lot of drivers drink and drive.
By one common statistical measure - fatalities per 100,000 vehicles - India and China are far and away Asia's deadliest countries; Japan and Taiwan are the safest. People are nearly 100 times more likely to die on the road in India than in Japan; 32 times more likely to die on mainland China than in Taiwan. Deadly enough to rank China's drivers as the worst in Asia. Who knows? Maybe the worst in the world.
About the Author
Jedd Dolorfino



