Friday, December 29, 2017

FTC Received 7.1 million Do-Not-Call Complaints in FY 2017

(Click on the image for more Federal Trade Commission information)

From Gizmodo: in 2017 the FTC received 7.1 million complaints, which is 1.8 million more complaints than it received the previous year and twice as many complaints as it received in 2015. Out of the 2017 complaints, 2.5 million were about human spammers, while 4.5 million were about robocalls. The FTC is now averaging more than 375,000 complaints about robocalls per month. [Not everyone reports violations so these numbers are on the low side.]

Criminal’s to do list:

  1. Break into car in airport long-term parking. Use registration to locate vacant home. Use garage door opener to open home.
  2. Break into car parked at football game. Steal garage door opener and portable GPS. Use GPS to locate home vacant for the duration of the game.
  3. Steal woman’s handbag from car while she is pumping gas. Use cellphone to text her husband to get her debit card PIN. Immediately withdraw money.
  4. Steal wallet from purse in grocery cart seat. Call victim later and tell her you are store security and have her wallet, come get it at the store. While she goes to get it, break into her house and take what I want.
  5. Enjoy the good life!

Reporter's 75 Year-Old Dad Scammed Out of $800

(Click on the image for the 7 On Your Side report)

This can happen to anyone, at any age. Don't let it happen to you!

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

New year, new law: Maryland smoke alarm law takes effect Jan. 1

(Click on the image for  Kathy Stewart's WTOP report)
  • A new smoke alarm law intended to save more lives is taking effect on Jan. 1, 2018 in Maryland. It’s part of a nationwide trend to transition from old smoke detectors powered by 9-volt batteries to new smoke alarms that have a 10 year life span.
  • Maryland is the most recent state to require the more modern alarms which are tamper-resistant and last for 10 years without the battery needing to be replaced.
  • Starting New Year’s Day, Maryland residents will be required to replace 9-volt battery operated smoke detectors that are 10 years old with the new smoke detectors.
  • An old Maryland law that took effect on July 1, 2013 required the old smoke detectors to be replaced when they were 10 years old. The date the smoke detector was manufactured should be on the back of the unit. If a date can’t be found on the unit, then the smoke alarm is most likely more than 10 years old.
  • In 2013, the Maryland General Assembly basically amended and updated a 38-year-old smoke alarm law in order to take advantage of the newer technology.
  • Even though the new law contains some of the same language as the 2013 law, which states 10-year old smoke alarms should be replaced, lawmakers say that was on purpose in order to re-publicize the message to replace 10-year-old smoke alarms.
  • While hard-wired smoke alarms are not effected by the legislation, their efficiency is also affected by age. Hard-wired smoke alarms that need to be changed cannot be changed to any battery-operated system, so it’s important to check the home’s requirements.

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Vision Zero aims to end Cleveland traffic fatalities

How Many Traffic Fatalities Are Acceptable?



"What is the acceptable number of traffic deaths," asks Andy Young, a truck safety attorney in Cleveland. "How many fatalities are acceptable."
Young says if you consider family, there is no acceptable number other than zero.

Friday, December 22, 2017

News from Your Department of Environment (DoE)

Previously there was no limit on the number of trash bags. You are encouraged to use additional containers rather than a bag.
Note there will be no yard trim/Christmas Tree collections New Year's Day. Yard trim collection resumes on January 8, 2018.

How to Avoid Becoming a Victim of Gift Card Fraud

(Click on the image for Susan Hogan's News4 report)

Monday, December 18, 2017

Thank You

Thank You
For Driving Carefully😊

Saturday, December 16, 2017

A year after opening, MGM casino resort mostly lives up to expectations

(Click on the image for Luz Lazo's Washington Post report)
"For the most part, the casino has lived up to expectations, according to county officials and residents. The $1.4 billion resort in suburban Washington quickly became Maryland’s most profitable casino, bringing 6 million visitors, thousands of jobs and pumping millions of dollars into the local economy."

Sunday, December 10, 2017

Have Your Chimneys Swept and Inspected at Least Once Every Year

(Click on the image for Darcy Spencer's News4 report)
Missing brick caused $200,000 in damages on Braemer Circle.
"A fire was burning inside a fireplace about 2:30 a.m. at the home on Braemer Circle in Fort Washington and the missing brick allowed the fire to spread, Prince George's County Fire Department spokesman Mark Brady said on Twitter.
The fire reached the inside walls and the attic, causing $200,000 in damages before firefighters quenched the flames, Brady said.
Photos showed what looked like a massive fireball come out of the top of the house.
The homeowner escaped unharmed."

Friday, December 8, 2017

Are You a Good Driver?

A good driver uses good judgment to keep out of situations requiring superior skills.

Thursday, December 7, 2017

AAA: Speed Cameras Should Be an Adjunct to Stepped Up Police Enforcement, Not a Replacement

"AAA supports automated enforcement when the proper safeguards are in place and they are multiple, as outlined in federal, including the FHWA & NHTSA, and state guidelines. AAA believes that the deployment [of] automated enforcement systems (AES), when and where warranted, should be used as an adjunct to, not a substitution for stepped up enforcement of traffic laws by police officers. There are many legal, safety, ethical, engineering and economic factors to weigh."  [John Townsend]

(Click on the image for the video)

Among the report's recommendations:
  • Ensure that public outreach and community involvement remain core aspects of the program.
  • Require that revenue and expenditure data related to the Safe Speed program are readily accessible to the public on the County's website and in annual budget documents.

Monday, December 4, 2017

Chief Stawinski Takes “Chief On The Go” To The Children for the Holidays


Every month, Chief Hank Stawinski takes his office out into communities across the county for a day.   The “Chief On The Go” events are spent meeting neighbors and answering your questions.  The events also serve as a great opportunity for residents to meet their district police station command staff.  This month, the Chief is going to do things a bit different in the spirit of the holidays.  The Chief will spend time with area children.
In December, we are hosting two major holiday events, the Cora Rice Christmas Party for Deserving Children and Toys for Tots where the Chief will rub elbows with our younger residents, answer their questions, and deliver too many hugs to count.  For grown ups who would like to participate as volunteers at either of these events, please reach out to Sgt. Dadzie at 301-909-7127.


You can donate a toy at the District VII station or any fire station in the county up until Christmas Day. Thank you so much! We hope to bring smiles to lots of faces this holiday season.

Friday, December 1, 2017

And Here's Another PayPal Phishing Scam You'll Want to Avoid

(Click on the image for the report)
Never login or provide any information to a website that you reach by clicking on a link sent to you by email, no matter how official or authentic it seems. If you get an email warning you about a security issue, pop open a new tab, manually type the company’s URL in yourself, and proceed from there. Treat all links sent to you by email—as well as files, for that matter—with the utmost suspicion, always. 

MD-210 Construction Update

Her Name is Hope: A Good Cop Story

(Click on the image for the CNN report)
Police officer adopts homeless mother's opioid-addicted newborn.
Police officers will often tell you there's no such thing as a routine call when you're patrolling the streets.
But when Albuquerque police officer Ryan Holets responded to a possible theft at a nearby convenience store, it had all the hallmarks of a mundane assignment he could quickly clear from the call log.
It didn't turn out that way.
As Ryan left the convenience store on September 23rd, he noticed out of the corner of his eye a couple sitting on the grass against a cement wall. It appeared the man and woman were shooting up heroin in broad daylight behind the convenience store.
Ryan turned on his body camera and approached the couple but he wasn't prepared for what he saw. The woman was in the middle of injecting a needle into her companion's arm. Then he noticed the woman was pregnant.