Courtesy Pulaski County Clerk s Office
Pulaski County Clerk Linda Burnett (center) and her staff met Monday with Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles and local FFA students to promote the Ag Tag initiative, through which farmers can donate $10 for ag youth programs when they renew their farm tags each March.
Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles was in Pulaski County Monday promoting Kentucky Agriculture Month in partnership with the Pulaski County Clerk s Office.
March is the month for renewing specialty farm license plates which are open to anyone engaged in the production of crops, livestock or dairy products. New plates or renewal decals expire March 31 of each year and cost $31 the annual $21 licensing fee per ag tag plus $10 which is donated to the Ag Tag initiative benefitting local FFA (Future Farmers of America) and 4-H programs.
How a bill looks to get suspended drivers back on the road legally Ethan May, Indianapolis Star
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Corrections & Clarifications:
Due to an error from the BMV, a previous version of this story listed an incorrect number of Hoosiers who had an active driver s license suspension.
A bill that recently advanced out of the Indiana House looks to get people back on the road legally by focusing on the most charged misdemeanor crime in Indiana: driving with a suspended license and a prior conviction.
About 330,000 Hoosiers had an active driver s license suspension in 2019, according to Chris Daniels of the Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys Council.
By Tom Moore
Mar 2, 2021
(Columbus) - There s a new fraud, and it s designed to make you think it s from the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles. If you receive a text referring to Real ID requirements going into effect, and it has a link to click on, don t do it.
Real ID, which will require special drivers licenses or state ID cards to board an airline flight, do go into effect later this year. However, to get a Real ID compliant license, you must go to a deputy registrar office, and take along the proper paperwork.
Clicking on this link is just a way for someone to steal your personal information. If you do receive a text like this, contact the Ohio BMV.
Despite opposition from State Police, the Indiana House on Monday voted to eliminate the license to carry a handgun in Indiana.
House Bill 1369 passed the House by a 65-31 vote and now heads to the Senate, where its already picked up key endorsements. Under the legislation, sometimes called constitutional carry, certain offenders still could be prohibited from carrying handguns.
The bill would eliminate the license in March 2022. The licenses raise $5.3 million per year to train law enforcement officers, a tab that taxpayers would at least partially have to pick up.
Opponents worry the bill would make police officers and the general public less safe, but advocates say law abiding citizens should not have to pay for a right guaranteed to them by the Constitution.