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Stopsmartmetersbc. Section One – Class Action Lawsuit Section Two – ARCHIVES Section Three – Documents to Share Section Four – Posters, Flyers, Bumper Stickers, Photos Section One – Class Action Lawsuit QUESTIONS?

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Same Participation Form and Q&A in smaller print-size for distribution:Mini Class Action Participation Form Mini Q&AREFUSAL TO PAY- online form letter to send to BC HydroNEW STATUS UPDATE November 3, 2013NEW REALITIES TO CONSIDER Meter ChoicesNEW OPT-OUT SIGN FOR ANALOGSFLYERNotice of Civil Claim B.C. SEND THIS NO-FEE OPT-OUT NOTICE IF YOU HAVE NOT INFORMED HYDRO OF YOUR INTENTION TO REFUSE OR WISH TO REMOVE A SMART METER: Commercial Accounts now included in the Lawsuit Section Two – ARCHIVES Updated October 2013 : “REFUSAL to PAY – FORM LETTER to send to BC HYDRO” Updated Sept 2013 :

3 things to know about the proposed mask law - Canada. Federal legislators are currently debating a proposed law that could carry a 10-year prison term for concealing your identity during a riot.

3 things to know about the proposed mask law - Canada

Introduced last November by Conservative backbencher Blake Richards, Bill C-309 was a private member’s bill inspired by the Stanley Cup riot in Vancouver last June and the G20 riot in Toronto in June 2010. Richards said police had been seeking better ways to respond to public assemblies that become dangerous. It is already illegal to take part in a riot, but Bill C-309 would create a separate offence criminalizing the use of a mask while participating in such an action. The bill is back in the House of Commons on Monday before going to the Senate for final approval. The bill originally proposed a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment, but last week Richards proposed to increase that to 10 years in order to bring it in line with the existing Criminal Code offences related to wearing a disguise.

Bill 41 – 2012: Miscellaneous Statutes Amendmenent Act (No. 2), 2012. MISCELLANEOUS STATUTES AMENDMENT ACT (No. 2), 2012 HER MAJESTY, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of British Columbia, enacts as follows: Part 1 — Advanced Education Amendments Engineers and Geoscientists Act SECTION 1: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 2] is consequential to amendments to bylaw-making powers relating to the direct supervision of former members and licensees. 1 Section 2 (6) and (7) of the Engineers and Geoscientists Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 116, is amended by striking out "Nothing in this Act" and substituting "Subject to the bylaws made under section 10 (1) (b.2), nothing in this Act or the bylaws". SECTION 2: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 6] gives the holders of limited licences the same ability as members of the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists to elect the president and the vice presidents of the association.

Prosecute the Pope. The Neville Brothers were formed by the hard life and hard times, but they are also heirs to America’s richest musical tradition: the aural gumbo of New Orleans. As New Orleans Jazz fest kicks off here’s John Ed Bradley’s 1991 GQ profile on the Neville Brothers. The Neville’s are a national treasure and this behind-the-scenes look lets us in on the men behind the magic.

The subject is in good hands. Bradley is the author of six novels, including Tupelo Nights, as well as one of the finest sports memoirs ever written, It Never Rains in Tiger Stadium . Bradley’s seventh novel, Call Me By My Name, is a Young Adult title that will be published in a few weeks. In the meantime, dig into his story, “Bards of the Bayou” and then do yourself a favor and listen to some tunes by the Neville brothers.

Tipitina's in the warm blue fog, squatting beneath a crescent moon so sharp and clean you could shave a wild hog with it. “Been four, five, months maybe, since we played Tip’s,” Art is saying. "Duke.” Law. "Legal concept" redirects here.

Law

Lady Justice, a symbol of justice. She is depicted as a goddess equipped with three items: a sword, symbolising the coercive power of a court; scales, representing an objective standard by which competing claims are weighed; and a blindfold indicating that justice should be impartial and meted out objectively, without fear or favor and regardless of money, wealth, power or identity.[1] Law is a term which does not have a universally accepted definition,[2] but one definition is that law is a system of rules and guidelines which are enforced through social institutions to govern behaviour.[3] Laws can be made by legislatures through legislation (resulting in statutes), the executive through decrees and regulations, or judges through binding precedents (normally in common law jurisdictions).

Private individuals can create legally binding contracts, including (in some jurisdictions) arbitration agreements that exclude the normal court process. T4TT - EXCLUSIVE... Dean C. Clifford - Both Sides of The Story... Part 1.