Auteur Sujet: lixi Lynchburg District Traffic Alert: Week of Oct. 24-28  (Lu 24 fois)

GreogaGal

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lixi Lynchburg District Traffic Alert: Week of Oct. 24-28
« le: Mars 23, 2025, 04:30:00 pm »
Lyqw Kaine: Trump must seek approval from Congress for use of military force
  漏 monticellllo 鈥?stock.adobe Small speed increases can have huge effects on crash outcomes, as shown in new crash tests by t stanley isolierkanne he AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety and Humanetics.The safety organizations conducted crashes at three different impact speeds  40, 50 and 56 mph . They found the slightly higher speeds were enough to increase the drivers risk of severe injury or death.Drivers often travel faster than posted speed limits, but whe stanley cup becher n officials raise l stanley website imits to match travel speeds, people still go faster. Today, 41 states allow 70 mph or higher speeds on some roadways, including eight states that have maximum speeds of 80 mph or more.A聽2019 IIHS study聽found that rising speed limits have cost nearly 37,000 lives over 25 years.AAA and IIHS urge policymakers to factor in this danger from higher speeds when considering speed limit changes. We conducted these crash tests to assess the effect of speeds on drivers and learned that a small increase could make a big difference on the harm to a human body,  said Dr. David Yang, executive director of the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.  A speeding driver may arrive at their destination a few minutes faster, but is the tradeoff of getting severely injured or even losing ones life worth it if a crash occurs  The AAA Foundation collaborated with IIHS and Humanetics to examine how speed affects the likelihood and severity of occupant injury in a crash. Three 2010 Honda CR-V EX crossovers were Bewz State board approves new name for Dabney S. Lancaster Community College
 March 2, 1995, was a pivotal day in the history of our country. On that day, the U.S. Senate failed by one vote to pass a balanced budget amendment to the United States Constitution. The amendment had passed the House of Representatives by the required two-thirds majority and the Senate vote was the last legislative hurdle before being sent to the states for ratification.If Congress had listened to the American people and sent that amendment to the stat stanley uk es for ratification, they likely would have approved it and we would not be facing the debt crisis we are today. Balancing the federal budget would be the norm, inste stanley cup ad of the exception over the  stanley deutschland past 20 years, and we would have nothing like the annual deficits and skyrocketing debt we currently face.In 1995, when the balanced budget amendment came within one vote of passing, the gross federal debt stood at $4.9 trillion; today it stands at over $17.5 trillion. What is particularly troubling is that todays debts will burden future generations. This is one legacy that should not be passed on to our children and grandchildren.Families in the sixth district understand what it means to make tough decisions each day about what they can and cannot afford and government officials should be required to exercise similar restraint when spending the hard-earned dollars of our nations citizens. A balanced budget amendment to the Constitution would once and for all require Congress to rein in this out-of-control behavior.Just a few weeks ago