Boater fined for not registering boat
A boater has been fined almost £1,000 for leaving his boat unregistered on the River Glen in Lincolnshire.
From:
14 May 2021 The Environment Agency wants to remind boat owners to register any vessel that is kept on their waterways or they will face enforcement action.
Simon J Brand, of Station Road, Surfleet, Lincolnshire left his boat unregistered on the River Glen at Surfleet on 3 July 2019.
He was convicted in his absence by Lincoln Magistrates Court on 4 March 2021. As a result he was fined £440, with costs of £250, compensation £198.76 and victim surcharge £44. His court appearance was delayed due to the pandemic.
A West Michigan inventor may have simplified those trips to the store to take back returnable cans and plastic bottles.
One thing I love about America, there is always somebody trying to make things easier with a new gadget. A man from Spring Lake has created a new one of a kind machine that could make life easier for us all.
According to WOOD, emergency physician and inventor Nathan Arnold has invented a device you can use at your home to deal with cans and plastic bottles called Nessie. This new piece of equipment would eliminate the need to take back bottles and cans to the store and still allow you to get your refund back.
A West Michigan inventor may have simplified those trips to the store to take back returnable cans and plastic bottles.
One thing I love about America, there is always somebody trying to make things easier with a new gadget. A man from Spring Lake has created a new one of a kind machine that could make life easier for us all.
According to WOOD, emergency physician and inventor Nathan Arnold has invented a device you can use at your home to deal with cans and plastic bottles called Nessie. This new piece of equipment would eliminate the need to take back bottles and cans to the store and still allow you to get your refund back.
To solve a very Michigan problem, this inventor created an in-home bottle counter
Dale G. Young for Crain s Detroit Business
ER doctor Nathan Arnold and a group he assembled have come up with a machine he calls Nessie. The machine scans drink containers for applicable deposit, credits any account you may specify, and then crushes the container before dropping it into a recycling bin below.
Crain s Forum: Recycling
This Crain s Forum looks at the state of recycling in Michigan. These are the stories in this report:
But what if they could be redeemed in your kitchen?
Nathan Arnold, an emergency room physician, has invented a freestanding machine that counts and crushes aluminum cans and plastic bottles after scanning each barcode.
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