Bag of Randomness
- I added two more frequent commenter links in the sidebar link section.
- I heard rubbing a dry bar of soap on a mosquito bite will relieve itching, I hope to give that a try the next I get bit.
- I think a woman broke an unwritten rule of courtesy yesterday. As I approached the front door of Subway yesterday I waited a few more seconds than usual so I could hold the door open for an approaching woman. She thanked me for holding the door but when we got inside she didn’t let me ahead of her. It’s not big deal or anything, but it’s the first time I held a door open for a woman and after doing so, she didn’t allow me to go ahead of her.
- Can I be the first to start the Les Miles as the next Cowboys head coach rumors?
- Michael Jordan’s high school coach has fallen on tough times and one SI writer thinks Jordan is obligated to help him out.
- If you live in the UK and have a single parent, there’s now a website for the kids to help their single parents find a date.
- Just a clip of Wilford Brimley playing an OB/GYN.
- Mothra might just become a reality
- Teen whose racy photo was omitted from yearbook arrested at underage drinking party
- Dallas just might be getting an automated parking vault
- Use Your iPad as a Second Monitor with Air Display – Link updated
- Not bothering to exercise ‘should be treated as a medical condition’
- Disney is working on some new physical face cloning that’s going to make the Hall of Presidents (and I guess some other rides/shows) pretty darn lifelike.
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Conn. Homeowner Billed 25 Years for Streetlights
A Connecticut utility has reimbursed a woman almost $10,500 after acknowledging it billed her for 25 years for the electricity used to power streetlights near her home.
Grace Edwards tells the Hartford Courant she discovered the billing error after a prospective buyer for the house in Cheshire asked for a history of utility charges.
Connecticut Light & Power says a developer who previously owned the home had agreed to pay for the lights.
The company initially refused to reimburse Edwards but relented when the state’s Office of Consumer Counsel got involved.
The overcharges amounted to about $35 each month.
CL&P spokesman Mitch Gross says the utility has apologized to Edwards for the error and inconvenience.
It’s interesting that the apology only comes after the state’s Office of Consumer Counsel got involved.