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CHARLIE NORMAN
One might say I’m a sentimentalist at heart.
Maybe even to a fault, and that’s OK. You see, today I write this on a day that will be like no other in my life. I’m 70 years old now. exactly twice the age of my son Charles IV (age 35).
Tomorrow’s my birthday and so, there’ll never be another time in our lives that’ll happen (go figure). So I pause, savor the moment, and count my many blessings. My how the time flies. I remember when.
It seems the older I get, the faster time goes. In a few weeks, my wife and I will be welcoming our first granddaughter into the family (through daughter Noelle). So this little gal will be duly spoiled by me – not so much the five grandsons.
Sofiane Messaodi stood in the rain Thursday outside the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles office off Kenny and Henderson in Columbus.
The 40-year-old Upper Arlington resident had been waiting since 8 a.m. It was nearly 1 p.m. – the same time he had to be at work.
He and the hundred or so others with him in line Thursday had plenty of company around the state.
As of Monday, the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles reported a backlog of 270,000 motor vehicle registrations and driver s licenses that needed to be renewed now that the state has ended the pandemic-prompted grace period. As of Thursday at 2 p.m., BMV officials reported 95,180 drivers licenses and IDs that needed to be renewed and 147,491 vehicle registrations that had expired.
Ohio BMV made $250 million over past decade selling personal information from driver, vehicle records to third parties
According to a 10 Investigates review, data brokers, private investigators and others were among those who purchased access to personal information from the state. Author: Bennett Haeberle Updated: 10:31 PM EDT July 1, 2021
Ohio’s Bureau of Motor Vehicles made more than $40 million last year selling personal information from driver and vehicle records to third parties.
In the past 10 years, sales from this practice earned the state $250 million in revenue, a 10 Investigates’ review of state data uncovered.
Data brokers, credit agencies, insurance and towing companies along with private investigators were among those who purchased access to the personal information from the state, according to 10 Investigates’ review.
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