Step Up to a Prenup

July 3, 2006 – 9:49 am

You may not be Donald Trump but you may have more assets than you realize. Most police officers and deputies participate in the Virginia Retirement System or some other pension fund through their employing municipality. Do you have an IRA, stocks, real estate or other assets? Are you planning to “tie the knot” soon? If so, you may want to check out this article from The Motley Fool about prenupial agreements.

I know you are head over heels in love but the facts are 1 in 3 first marriages fail and 1 in 2 second and third marriages hit the rocks. A marriage is as much a financial partnership as a domestic partnership so check out what The Fool says now so you don’t end up being a fool later.

CLICK HERE:

Step Up to a Prenup

Reading People

July 2, 2006 – 17:35 pm

Reading PeopleI was recently doing a little research into body language and its possible uses during an interview situation. I thought I would compile a short list of the meanings behind some of the more commonly observed and unconsciously sent messages. Here are just a few of the ones I found:

  • Crossing arms across chest
    Defensive feelings
  • Lowering head
    Not interested – doesn’t want to be bothered
  • Leaning head or body forward
    Willingness to listen; interested; or wants to leave
  • Steepling fingers
    Extreme confidence; superiority
  • Rubbing or touching nose with finger
    Disapproval
  • Shifting posture away from person talking
    No longer listening
  • Blinking or clearing the throat repeatedly
    Nervous or feeling guilty
  • Putting hand over mouth
    Hesitant to speak
  • Rubbing back of neck
    Frustrated
  • Holding head in the palm of hand
    Boredom
  • Tugging ear
    Wants to interrupt
  • Sitting with locked ankles and clenched hands
    Holding back
  • Taking off and cleaning eyeglasses
    Procrastination; evaluating what is being said
  • Chin in palm with index finger along side of cheek
    Willingness to learn; contemplative

By the way, studies show that none of this stuff works with wives but it is apparently very accurate for husbands. Now you know how they always know. Please feel free to add some of your own to this list by clicking on the Comments link below.

Cardinal “Super Academy” Begins Monday

June 24, 2006 – 9:45 am

The 47th Entry Level Law Enforcement class will begin Monday, June 26, 2006. Recruits who sucessfully complete this challenging “Super Academy” will be certified as law enforcement officers. Check back over the the next 20 weeks and I will keep you posted on their progress.

Localities Squabble Over Police Academies

June 23, 2006 – 5:34 am

If the two sides do not agree to merge into one facility, the estimated cost of two separate projects could be $10 million.

This article, which was written by Reed Williams, appeared in the Roanoke Times on June 23, 2006.

Roanoke and Roanoke County both want new police academies.

Officials from the two localities have discussed the possibility of building one academy and sharing it.

But Roanoke officials are leaning toward building theirs in the city. And Roanoke County officials say they want to build one in the county — even though there is a moratorium on starting new police academies in Virginia.

If the two sides do not agree to merge into one facility, the estimated total cost of the two projects could be $10 million — about $5 million for each.

“Does this valley really need three police academies?” said Rich Schumaker, director of the Salem-based Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy.

Police and sheriff’s deputies in Roanoke and Roanoke County already have places to train. County sheriff’s deputies use the Cardinal Academy. The Roanoke County Police Department, which has 134 sworn positions, contracts with the Roanoke Police Department, with 249 sworn positions, to train at the city’s academy at the Jefferson Center.

County officials say that Cardinal Academy is inadequate, for now and the long term, and they note that the academy has little space to expand in the future. City officials also say they need a new academy to meet their needs.

Roanoke County Sheriff Gerald Holt, with the support of the county board of supervisors, notified the Cardinal Academy last week that he plans to pull out of the academy, effective June 2007.

Holt wants to train his deputies at a “super academy” that he hopes will be built in the county. Roanoke County police also would like to train there.

But the sheriff and Roanoke County face legal roadblocks and other complications.

For starters, state law makes it difficult to leave Cardinal, and the academy doesn’t want the sheriff’s office to go. On top of that, Roanoke County’s vision to build a new academy in the county could depend on whether Roanoke goes along with the idea.

Even though there is a moratorium on starting a new academy in Virginia, the Roanoke police already are certified to train and theoretically could contract to train county police and sheriff’s deputies at a new location, said Ron Bessent, program administrator for training and development for the Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services.

Or, as County Administrator Elmer Hodge suggested, the new county academy could be an authorized satellite of the city academy.

If the city is not on board, Hodge said he will look at every possible option to meet his goal. That could mean asking the General Assembly to allow Roanoke County to build its own academy despite the moratorium. If none of those efforts works, Hodge said the county is prepared to take legal action, though he wouldn’t elaborate.

House of Delegates Majority Leader Morgan Griffith, R-Salem, said that the General Assembly could pass a bill exempting Roanoke County from the moratorium.

But Griffith, who represents Salem and a chunk of Roanoke County, said that before deciding whether to support such a measure, “I would have to see how it’s going to affect the region as a whole.”

Another complicating factor is the question of where to train nearly 200 employees of a regional jail to open in 2008.

As for Holt’s efforts to withdraw from the Cardinal Academy, state law requires a two-thirds vote of the academy’s governing council. Members of the council, which is made up of representatives from the academy’s member agencies, effectively would be voting on a tuition increase for their own agencies.

The void that would be left if the 110-deputy Roanoke County Sheriff’s Office leaves the academy would raise the annual cost for each of the 35 remaining members by $32 per officer, Schumaker estimated. That would increase the Salem Police Department’s annual tuition by about $2,688 per person.

“Anytime cost goes up per officer for your department, you’re concerned about that,” said James Bryant, Salem’s police chief. Bryant sits on the Cardinal Academy’s governing council but said he’s uncertain how he will vote later this year.

The new county police academy would be on the 28-acre site of the Roanoke Valley Regional Fire-EMS Training Center off Kessler Mill Road.

Hodge envisions demolishing an old building on the property and constructing a roughly 15,800-square-foot facility that would complement the building that houses fire and rescue training on the site. Hodge estimated that construction of the new building could cost as much as $5 million.

“Some people would say we’re spending money unnecessarily, but that’s not true,” Hodge said. “If we stay with Roanoke city we will be asked to share in the costs in constructing their new academy. If we remain in the Cardinal Academy, eventually they will be forced to expand and we will be asked to pay for part of that too.”

Hodge says that putting the two academies on the same site would be good for regional cooperation among law enforcement, fire and EMS agencies. He also said the site is perfect to train for regional disasters and other crises such as hostage situations.

Cardinal officials say, however, that their academy already fulfills the needs of the sheriff’s office and could do the same for the new jail’s staff.

Holt said he is putting the interests of his sheriff’s office above those of Cardinal.

Meanwhile, Roanoke City Manager Darlene Burcham said she is keeping an open mind during discussions with Hodge, but she favors keeping the city’s academy in the city. She declined to say which site was under consideration, but said the project could cost about $5 million.

With the new regional jail set to open in 2008, members of the jail authority are scrambling to determine where the nearly 200 new workers should train.

Holt, who is chairman of the jail authority, would like to see them train at a Roanoke County academy, but that decision also rests with representatives from Salem, Montgomery County and Franklin County.

Members of the jail authority have been looking at regional academies, including Cardinal.

Montgomery County Sheriff Tommy Whitt, who is on the jail authority, said the idea of training them at a county academy was “futuristic” because of the legal roadblocks.

“There’s no authority for Roanoke County to form a new academy,” Whitt said. “There’s no guarantee that that will ever happen. That’s going to take a change in legislation and everything else.”

Who Cares If You Got Milk?

June 18, 2006 – 22:23 pm

Since I have been writing so many serious blog entries lately, I thought I would lighten things up a little. These little gems were in an e-mail I received last week so I thought I would share them with you.

You know, I spent a fortune on deodorant before I realized that people didn’t like me anyway.

I was thinking that women should put pictures of missing husbands on beer cans!

Keep smiling! 🙂

Three Things to Think About

June 15, 2006 – 18:05 pm

1. COWS
2. THE CONSTITUTION
3. THE TEN COMMANDMENTS

1. COWS

Is it just me, or does anyone else find it amazing that our government can track a cow born in Canada almost three years ago, right to the stall where she sleeps in the state of Washington? And, they tracked her calves to their stalls.

But they are unable to locate 11 million illegal aliens wandering around our country. Maybe we should give them all a cow.

2. THE CONSTITUTION

They keep talking about drafting a Constitution for Iraq. Why don’t we give them ours?

It was written by a lot of really smart guys, it’s worked for over 200 years and we’re not using it anymore.

3 THE TEN COMMANDMENTS

The real reason that we can’t have the Ten Commandments in a courthouse……..

You cannot post “Thou Shalt not Steal,” “Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery” and Thou Shalt Not Lie” in a building full of lawyers, judges and politicians–it creates a hostile work environment.

-Author Unknown

Response to Sheriff’s Office Readies For Separation Woes

June 14, 2006 – 18:53 pm

The following article was written by Cody Lowe (981-3425) and published in the Roanoke Times on Wednesday, June 14, 2006. Mr. Lowe attempted to contact representatives from Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy prior to writing the story but was unable to do so due to the late hour of the Supervisors’ actions. However, the article contains several inaccuracies so I am providing the following response to the article in an effort to correct the public record.

The Roanoke County Sheriff’s Office wants to sever ties with a training academy but it’s not going to be easy.

The Roanoke County Sheriff’s Office wants out of its relationship with the Cardinal Criminal Justice Training Academy.

The problem is, the Cardinal folks don’t want the sheriff’s office to go and it looks like the Virginia legislature could make it more difficult for a separation to take place.

So, the Roanoke County Board of Supervisors went on record Tuesday unanimously endorsing Sheriff Gerald Holt’s quest to begin severing his office’s ties with the law-enforcement training facility.

Holt and Roanoke County Administrator Elmer Hodge told the board Tuesday that the Salem-based Cardinal facility, created in 1983, is no longer adequate to meet the county’s needs.

That’s a situation that will only get worse, they said, as hiring begins for a new regional jail scheduled to open in 2008 that will need almost 200 new employees.

COMMENT: It should be noted that the Roanoke County Sheriff’s Office and the Western Virginia Regional Jail are separate and distinct entities. Sheriff Holt informed the Cardinal Executive Board that the regional jail did not intend to affiliate with any academy.

Although Sheriff Holt is the chairman of the Western Virginia Regional Jail Authority, all of the members of the Jail Authority will vote to determine where the employees of the Authority will attend training.

The Authority members recently reiterated this fact when they informed Sheriff Holt that he was not authorized to represent the Authority on this issue at a recent meeting of the Committee On Training where this issue was on the agenda for discussion.

“Just today, I had six new deputies lined up to begin in June in basic recruit school,” Holt told the board, “but the class was canceled. Now, they will not have an opportunity to begin until next February.”

COMMENT: Sheriff Holt failed to mention that the reason the entry level jailor/court services class was canceled was that there were only 8 students enrolled in the course. The Department of Criminal Justice Services Jails Training Section teaches 5 weeks of the 10 week course and they will not conduct a course for less than 15 students. Obviously, if the academy was forced to cancel a course due to low student enrollment, this should alleviate the Sheriff’s concerns about Cardinal’s ability to handle the training needs of the regional jail.

“It would be a tremendous benefit to the sheriff’s office and the county’s citizens to move in a new direction,” Holt said, with more control over law-enforcement training.

COMMENT: Sheriff Holt has no basis for making this comment. Sheriff Holt was the Chairman of Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy in 1992 and 1993 and has sat on the Executive Board for longer than any other Board member. As such, he has had more opportunities to impact academy operations than any other member agency administrator.

The citizens of Roanoke County will be the ones left to pick up the multi-million dollar bill for the construction of a new criminal justice training academy that will deliver redundant services.

In fact at the June 8th meeting of the Committee on Training, Mr. Hodge attempted to justify the need for a new academy in the Roanoke Valley. However, a closer examination reveals that Roanoke County has a standing invitation to be a partner in Roanoke City’s new academy that will be built on 6 acres near the Roanoke Airport. The new academy will actually be closer to the Roanoke County Police Department Headquarters than the Roanoke City Police Department Headquarters. In addition, Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy is just minutes away and the New River Criminal Justice Training Academy is within a reasonable commuting distance. He did indicate that they hoped to convince agencies from the Roanoke and New River Valleys to join their effort. This is a polite way of saying that they were trying to solicit member agencies from Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy and New River Criminal Justice Training Academy to join their proposed academy.

Beginning in 2001, state law limited withdrawal applications from the state’s 10 regional training academies, including Cardinal. Members now may only request withdrawal every fifth year in October.

COMMENT: 15.2 – 1747 COV does not limit this requirement to regional academies.

The application must be filed by July 1, and a two-thirds vote of the academy’s board of directors is required to approve the withdrawal.

COMMENT: There is not July 1 requirement in 15.2 -1747. The law simply limits when the board of directors may consider a request to withdraw in October of every 5th year unless all of the directors agree otherwise.

It’s all pretty confusing and all untested because this is the first year members can request withdrawal, explained County Attorney Paul Mahoney.

It isn’t clear, for instance, whether the “governmental unit” that would withdraw from the academy is the board of supervisors or the sheriff’s office, he said.

COMMENT: 15.2 – 1747 is very clearly written. The academy agreements are based on either 15.2 1300 or 15.2 – 1747 and they require the agreements to be with the political subdivision not an agency.

The statute also fails to impose any sanctions or penalty on a “governmental unit” that decides to drop an academy membership if the academy refuses to approve it.

COMMENT: The issue of sanctions for non-compliance is currently under study by the Department of Criminal Justice Services. However, the General Assembly passed the amendments to 15.2 -1747 in 2000 which clearly specify the requirements under the law.

But the state’s regional academies are seeking emergency legislation from the General Assembly to make it even tougher for a member to withdraw, Holt said, and the county needs to act now while it has the chance.

COMMENT: The regional academies, which are made up of approximately 70 – 75% of the police departments and sheriff’s offices throughout the state, have asked the Department of Criminal Justice Services to consider passing an emergency update to their existing regulations to insure compliance with 15.2 – 1747.

The county’s police department left the Cardinal academy in 2001 just before the current law took effect. Its officers now train with the Roanoke Police Academy.

That facility is housed in the Jefferson Center in downtown Roanoke but has outgrown its space and is looking to relocate.

With Cardinal also landlocked, Hodge said, “We saw an opportunity to work together with other localities at an even greater level.”

Earlier this year, “We asked Roanoke city if they would be willing to discuss” a new regional training facility, Hodge said. “They said yes.

COMMENT: This is untrue. Roanoke City declined Mr. Hodge’s offer to build an academy in Roanoke County. Roanoke City did tell Mr. Hodge that Roanoke County was welcome to participate in the new academy that Roanoke City would be building in the city.

Then we talked to Cardinal Academy. At first they said yes, then they chose not to.”

COMMENT: Mr. Hodge attended a meeting of the Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy Executive Board and asked the Board to consider entering into an agreement with Roanoke County to open a new academy. Mr. Hodge was told that the Board would consider his offer and get back with him. At the May 30, 2006 Executive Board meeting, the Board informed Sheriff Holt that Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy has served the needs of our member agencies for 23 years and it would not be in the best interest of the academy to enter into an agreement with Roanoke County.

Today is Flag Day

June 14, 2006 – 5:12 am

Flag Day is a day for Americans to celebrate and show respect for our flag, its designers and makers. Our flag is a symbol of our independence and unity as a nation. Our flag has a proud history. It has been present at every battle fought by Americans and many people have died protecting it. It even stands proudly on the surface of the moon. As Americans, we have every right to be proud of our culture, our nation, and our flag. So raise the flag today and every day with pride!

Here are the basics of proper flag display:

  • The flag is normally flown from sunrise to sunset.
  • In the morning, raise the flag briskly. At sunset, lower it slowly. (Always raise and lower it ceremoniously).
  • The flag should not be flown at night without a light on it.
  • The flag should not be flown in the rain or inclement weather.
  • After a tragedy or death, the flag is flown at half staff for 30 days. It’s called “half staff” on land ,and “half mast” on a ship.
  • When flown vertically on a pole, the stars and blue field , or “union”, is at the top and at the end of the pole (away from your house).
  • The American flag is always flown at the top of the pole. Your state flag and other flags fly below it.
  • The union is always on top. When displayed in print, the stars and blue field are always on the left.
  • Never let your flag touch the ground.
  • Fold your flag when storing. Don’t just stuff it in a drawer or box.
  • Old flags should be burned or buried. Do not throw it in the trash.

For a more detailed list of flag display rules, visit FlagandBanner.com.

There is a very special ceremony for retiring the flag by burning it. It is a ceremony everyone should see. Your local Boy Scout group or American Legion post performs it on a regular basis. If you have an old flag, give it to them and attend the ceremony.

The Immigration Debate – Other Issues to Consider

June 12, 2006 – 7:48 am

This series of columns on immigration issues outlines some very interesting concerns that we should consider as we wrestle with the problems of controlling our borders. There is very little that I could say that is not addressed by Dr. Sowell. I encourage you to read his bio before reading the articles since his credentials will add a lot of credibility to his writings.

Thomas Sowell – Syndicate Columnist – Biography
Bordering on Fraud
Bordering on Fraud – Part II
Bordering on Fraud – Part III

VML Brief Cases – Spring 2006

June 4, 2006 – 8:15 am

VMLRusty is back in Virginia after an all expenses paid trip to the beautiful Mid-Eastern country of Iraq. He provides us with more analysis of recently decided court cases. Take a minute to review the Brief Cases file attached to this post.

CLICK HERE:

VML Brief Cases – Spring 2006

Website: Real Estate Basics (and more)

June 3, 2006 – 6:41 am

This time of year a lot of folks start thinking about buying or selling a house. Over the years, I have bought and sold several houses and I always learn something new, sometimes the hard way. If you have decided that it is time to take the plunge, you need to visit the Real Estate ABC site.

If you are a first-time buyer, you can learn what to look for and what you should avoid. You can even locate a local agent in your area. This may even be better than using the friend of a friend’s uncle. Even though this is a good feature, after selling my first house, I learned that some agents forget for whom they are working. The next time I sold a house, I addressed this problem by contacting several agents and telling them I was taking “bids” for an agent. I wasn’t looking for a reduction in the fee but I wanted a fully developed plan for selling my house. We interviewed 4 agents and the best qualified quickly stood out. As a result, we sold our house fairly quickly and got top dollar. Remember, you should “hire” your agent just like you would any other employee, so spend some time investigating his track record and interview him.  He is your employee and you will be paying him very well, I might add.

Oh, back to the site. You may also want to take a look at the articles that debunk commonly held beliefs. Like all real estate sites, there are plenty of calculators, info on the interest rates and all the tools that will help you figure out that, if you buy the house, you won’t be buying a new bass boat anytime soon.

CLICK HERE:

Real Estate ABC

Sanctions for Non-Compliance with Academy Membership Law

May 30, 2006 – 16:45 pm

In 2000, the Virginia General Assembly amended §15.2 – 1747 (C) and (D) of the Code of Virginia to establish a procedure for joining and withdrawing from a regional criminal justice academy effective 2001. The aforementioned paragraphs state the following:

§ 15.2-1747. Creation of academies.

C. Any governmental unit not a party to an original agreement creating an academy under this section or § 15.2-1300 may join the academy only by two-thirds vote of the board of directors of the academy. The governing body of the governmental unit seeking to join the academy shall request membership by resolution or ordinance. The board of directors shall provide for the addition of the joining governmental unit to the academy and the number, terms of office, and voting rights of members of the board of directors, if any, to be appointed by the joining governmental unit.

D. A governmental unit may withdraw from an academy created under this section or § 15.2-1300 only by two-thirds vote of the board of directors of the academy. The governing body of the governmental unit seeking to withdraw from the academy shall signify its desire by resolution or ordinance. The board of directors shall consider requests to withdraw in October 2001, and in October of every fifth year thereafter. No requests to withdraw shall be considered at any other time, unless agreed to unanimously. Any withdrawal approved by the board of directors shall be effective on June 30 of the following year. The board of directors shall provide for the conditions of withdrawal.

These amendments were introduced following a report by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission entitled, “Alternatives to Stabilize Regional Criminal Justice Training Academy Membership (Senate Document No. 7, 2000). Although, the language in the amendment clearly reflects the desire of the General Assembly to stabilize academy membership, they failed to attach any sanctions for non-compliance. Prior to the passage of these amendments, the procedures for joining or withdrawing from an academy were addressed by Department of Criminal Justice Servicess guidelines. These guidelines may no longer be applicable since they refer to a procedure that is no longer in compliance with the procedures specified under §15.2 – 1747. Even when the procedures were applicable, their enforceability was questionable since they were merely guidelines and not regulations.

I firmly believe that academies throughout the state are enjoying many benefits that we would probably not be experiencing had the amendments to §15.2 – 1747 not been adopted. There has been an unprecedented amount of resource sharing and cooperative training initiatives that would not have occurred in the past when academies felt compelled to compete for agency membership. In addition, agency administrators tend to work harder toward resolving issues whereas they might have simply moved to another academy in the past. These changes are having a positive impact on the delivery and quality of criminal justice training throughout Virginia.

Unfortunately, some agency administrators mistakenly believe that they are free to withdraw from their present academy this year since October 2006 is the “every fifth year thereafter” mentioned in §15.2 – 1747 (D). Although we can explain that the code does not grant them the privilege to withdraw and move to another academy, an administrator may ask the obvious question, “What happens if I don’t comply with the law?” For now , the answer may be – nothing. As such, I recommend that the Criminal Justice Services Board or the Committee on Training take whatever steps are necessary to adopt the following regulations:

1. The Department of Criminal Justice Services shall only accept a Criminal Justice Training Roster (DCJS Form 41) from the listed students’ academy of record except for an entry level training course or an initial instructor training course.

2. The Department of Criminal Justice Services shall not accept a Criminal Justice Training Roster (DCJS Form 41) from any training academy that contains the names of students from any agency that is not in compliance with §15.2 – 1747.

3. Prior to accepting any agency as a member, a criminal justice training academy must receive written confirmation from the director of the Department of Criminal Justice Services, or his designee, that the applying agency, and any agency that intends to affiliate with the new academy, is in compliance with §15.2 – 1747. The academy certification of any criminal justice training academy that fails to comply with this section shall be suspended and all grant funds withheld until the academy complies with all applicable regulations.

Another issue that needs to be addressed is the formation of new criminal justice training academies. The state budget contains the following statement:

The Board of Criminal Justice Services, consistent with §9.1 – 102, Code of Virginia, and §6VAC-20-20-61 or the Administrative Code, shall not approve or provide funding for the establishment of any new criminal justice training academy from July 1, 2006, through June 30, 2007.

This statement has been carried over as part of the appropriations act for several years and I believe it should remain in the act. However, since the statement could be removed from the bill in the future, I recommend that a procedure for establishing a new academy be included in the regulations. I recommend that the Criminal Justice Services Board or the Committee on Training take whatever steps are necessary to adopt the following regulations:

1. The governing body of the governmental unit seeking to establish a new criminal justice training academy shall signify its desire by resolution or ordinance.

2. The administrator of the governmental unit shall signify its desire to establish a new criminal justice training academy in writing to the chairman of the Criminal Justice Services Board.

3. The chairman of the Criminal Justice Services Board shall take the steps necessary to initiate a study to be conducted by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) to determine the necessity of establishing a new criminal justice training academy. The JLARC study should consider the following factors:

a. Availability of training through existing criminal justice training academies;
b. Availability of acceptable classrooms, ranges and other training facilities;
c. Geographical issues such as lengthy travel distances;
d. Impact on existing criminal justice training academies including economic, facilities and instructional issues;
e. Impact on regional homeland security readiness issues.

4. The Criminal Justice Services Board shall not approve any request to establish a new criminal justice training academy if the establishment of the new academy would result in redundant services within a small geographical area or a negative economic impact on the members of an existing criminal justice training academy.

5. The Criminal Justice Services Board shall not approve any request to establish a new criminal justice training academy if the governmental unit is not in compliance with §15.2 – 1747.

I believe that the addition of these recommended regulations will stabilize academy membership and foster continued cooperation between the criminal justice training academies and their member agencies. I also believe that emergency passage of these regulations is necessary to insure that governmental units throughout Virginia adhere to both the letter and spirit of the law that was properly enacted by the General Assembly.

Kick the Microsoft Habit

May 25, 2006 – 5:49 am

Are you ready to kick the Microsoft habit and try some alternative programs? Not only are many of the alternatives up to the task of replacing their Microsoft counterparts, many of them are FREE! Check out this review of the replacement programs and give them a try.

CLICK HERE:

Kicking The Microsoft Habit: Software Alternatives

Website: Free Telephone Information Service

May 24, 2006 – 5:08 am

Get directory assistance free! Visit Free411.com for the same information as pay directories but pay nothing. You can access the information via phone at 1-800-FREE411. Using the web interface can save you a little time but the phone number and the website both have the same information.

Of course in this day and age, you should be asking certain questions about any website before you use a service. So here are the answers to the questions you should be asking: No, you don’t have to sign up, No, You don’t have to give any private information, and no, your phone number is not sold to telemarketers.

The only down side to the site is when you call, you might have to listen to some ads while you’re on hold (remember, this a free service). Just remember that paid sponsors will be recommended first, if applicable.

Oh yea, FREE411 doesn’t mean free if you are using a cell. The call will still count as minutes on your cell plan.

CLICK HERE:

www.free411.com