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5 results for “motor vehicle licensing” · other

  • Town Clerk - Town of Wilmington, VT

    Wilmington, DE
    Other

    This document is the webpage for the Town Clerk's office in Wilmington, Vermont, providing contact information, office hours, and access to various town clerk services. The page includes details on services such as land records searches, civil marriages, dog licenses, voter registration, vital records filing, motor vehicle registration, tax appeals, and liquor licensing. Key contact information lists Town Clerk Therese Lounsbury and Assistant Town Clerk Eithne Eldred, with office hours from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at 2 East Main Street, and notes that the town's online land record index has been moved to RecordHub as of June 30, 2023.

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  • Clerk and Recorder's Office | Mesa County

    Mesa, AZ
    Other

    The Mesa County Clerk and Recorder's Office administers Motor Vehicle, Recording, Elections, Liquor and Marijuana licensing functions, and serves as Clerk to the Board of County Commissioners. On March 31, 2025, the office introduced the Ballot Verifier tool to enhance election transparency by enabling voters to access past election results and view cast ballots. On November 6, 2024, Mesa County Elections identified and prevented fraudulent mail-in ballot attempts through signature verification, leading to two arrests after reporting to the 21st Judicial District Attorney's Office. The office is located at 200 S. Spruce Street, Grand Junction, CO 81501, and operates Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

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electionsvoter transparencyballot verificationmotor vehicle licensingfraud prevention
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  • PA Micromobility Fact Sheet [PDF - 1 page]

    Bristol, PA
    Other

    This May 2021 Pennsylvania Department of Transportation fact sheet outlines regulatory requirements for six categories of micromobility devices under PA Vehicle Code. Electric scooters require a minimum age of 16, mandatory registration, insurance, and helmet use, with a maximum speed of 25 mph and prohibition on sidewalk and bike lane riding. Motor scooters require age 16 or Class M/C licensing, registration, insurance, helmet use, and 5 brake horsepower maximum, also prohibited on sidewalks and bike lanes. Segways require age 16, registration, insurance, helmet use, and optional sidewalk riding unless municipally prohibited. E-bikes require age 16, helmet use for riders under 21, maximum 750-watt motor and 25 mph design speed, permitted on sidewalks outside business districts and on bike lanes. Motorized pedalcycles require age 12 helmet use, maximum 20 mph motor-only speed, and permitted on sidewalks outside business districts. Traditional bicycles require only lighting at sunset-to-sunrise and have no age restriction. Electric scooters, skateboards, and unicycles cannot legally operate on public roadways in Pennsylvania.

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    micromobilityvehicle regulationpublic safety
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  • Records Available at The York County Archives

    York, PA
    Other

    The York County Archives maintains a searchable catalog of historical records spanning from 1749 to 1996, organized by record type and accessible through a multi-step search interface. Key holdings include Clerk of Courts Quarter Session Dockets (1749–1876, 1877–1949, 1950–1986), Deed Books (1749–1912, 1913–1943), Birth and Death Records (1852–1853, 1893–1906), Marriage Records (1852–1855, 1885–1949), Estate Files (1900–1985), and specialized registers for naturalization, motor vehicle registration, and professional licensing. Many series have been microfilmed or scanned and indexed, with originating offices including the Register of Wills, Prothonotary, Orphans' Court, Clerk of Courts, and Assessment Office. Users can search specific record types, view detailed descriptions of each series, and request records through the Archives' online platform.

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    records managementhistorical archivespublic records
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  • TUCSON, ARIZONA Supp. No. 125 – Instruction Sheet

    Tucson, AZ
    Other

    This document is an instruction sheet for updating the loose-leaf Code of Tucson, Arizona to Supplement No. 125, current through January 7, 2020. Users must remove and replace specified obsolete pages across multiple chapters including Businesses Regulated (Chapter 7), Civil Service–Human Resources (Chapter 10), Crimes and Offenses (Chapter 11), Motor Vehicles and Traffic (Chapter 20), Development Compliance Code (Chapter 23A), the Comparative Table, and the Code Index. The Tucson Code was originally adopted October 19, 1964, effective January 20, 1965, and is published by American Legal Publishing Corporation. Questions regarding the update process should be directed to American Legal Publishing at 1-800-445-5588.

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    municipal coderegulatory updatesdevelopment compliancetraffic regulationsbusiness licensing
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