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County crackdown on illegal dirt bikes
By NICOLE FORMISANO nformisano@liherald.com


County Executive Bruce Blakeman delivered a stern warning to operators of illegal dirt bikes: “Not in Nassau,” he said as he kicked a crumpled piece of scrap metal that had once been an illegal vehicle.
Blakeman issued this harsh message during an Aug. 2 news conference in East Rockaway’s Bay Park, as he stood behind dozens of dirt bikes, quads and ATVs that had been seized by the Nassau County Police Department. The vehicles are often unregistered, uninsured or being driven recklessly, the county executive said.
“Today, we’re going to destroy these vehicles and put on a demonstration to let the public know that we’re serious about making sure that our communities are safe,” Blakeman said, as a bulldozer from the Department of Public Works loomed nearby before it was used to crush these vehicles.
Illegally driven ATVs and dirt bikes have caused huge problems in West Hempstead, according to Maureen Greenberg, president of the West Hempstead Community Support Association. Greenberg, who lives near Hempstead Turnpike, said that the vehicles ran rampant last summer, swarming Hempstead Turnpike in the early evening and three police officers loading an at V into a bulldozer’s bucket in east Rockaway’s creating problems on other streets as well.
“They were a nuisance,” Greenberg said. “They would rev their engines to make a very loud sound, and since there were multiple of them going down the streets at the same time, it was a parade of these vehicles making a huge amount of noise.”
Greenberg said these vehicles were more than an annoyance — they were a safety hazard. Residents said they feared that a reckless bike or ATV would hit their car, another illegal vehicle, or even a pedestrian.
“They had no regard for the rules of the road,” Greenberg said. “It was dan-
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Protecting Your Future
with Michael and Suzanne Ettinger Attorneys-at-Law
Book Review: “ Die with Zero” by Bill Perkins
In “Die with Zero”, subtitled “Getting All That You Can from Your Money and Your Life”, retired engineer Bill Perkins takes an analytical view about making your life grow as opposed to making your money grow. Letting opportunities pass you by for fear of squandering money leads many to squander their lives instead.
Instead of just keeping on earning and earning to maximize wealth, too many of us don’t give nearly as much thought as to maximizing what they can get out of that wealth — including what they can give to others while they are living, instead of waiting until they die.
How To Reach Us
MAIN PHONE:
As opposed to spending money on things, which excitement depreciates over time, the author advocates spending on experiences, which grow in value over time, due to the “memory dividend”. Perkins advocates a systematic approach for eliminating the fear of running out of money (the main reason people oversave and underenjoy) while maximizing your and your loved ones enjoyment of that money.
Being that the main idea is that your life is the sum of your experiences, you should put some thought into planning the kind of experiences you want. If you die with significant wealth but a scarcity of experiences, you worked a lot of hours just to accumulate money that you either never used or were too old to use.
You can waste your life by underspending. Life is not only about “accumulating”, it is also about “decumulating” or using the money to maximize your life which, in the end, is nothing more than the memories you make.
In a similar vein, giving inheritances early maximizes the impact of those inheritance on the recipients’ quality of life. The average age of heirs being about sixty, the money usually arrives too late to do the most good.
Your time is limited. The chief regrets of the dying are that they didn’t live their dreams more and spent too much time working, missing out on relationships and life experiences.