
Pay Your Parking Ticket In Las Vegas With School Supplies
ollinka via Getty Images PlusDid you get a parking ticket in Las Vegas recently? Pay it with pencils and erasers.
Pay Your Las Vegas Parking Ticket With School Supplies For A Limited Time
Did you get a parking ticket in the city of Las Vegas for for stating a little too long at your meter? Or maybe you were just being lazy (go ahead, admit it). Or you were a space hog, and you hogged two parking spaces. Whatever the case, you might be able to pay for that ticket by donating school supplies.
Tickets must have been issued between May 1 and June 14, 2024, to qualify for the donation program.
How Much Will You Pay In School Supplies
Overtime at a meter, a spacehog, whatever your Las Vegas parking citation might be for, you can pay the ticket by bringing new, unwrapped school supplies of equal or better value, to pay your fine for the violation.
Las Vegas Parking officer supervisor Evelyn Valdez told 8 News Now, "it’s not a discount but it’s a way to give back to the community. No one likes getting a parking ticket so it’s fun to shop and help the teachers in our community.” Indeed - what a great way to help our educators!
You can pay your parking ticket fine, or donate some always needed school supplies to the City of Las Vegas, Parking Services Offices, at 350 S. City Parkway. But you have to do it within 30 days of the date you got the citation. And make sure you bring a sales receipt for the supplies you purchased - they will need to see the amount.
An Even Easier Way To Pay Your Las Vegas Parking Ticket
And here's another easy alternative. If you can't, or don't have time to go and physically buy school supplies, you can buy them online. And you can have them delivered to the Parking Services Offices. Make sure you put your citation number in the notes section of the delivery order.
What school supplies are needed? Here are a few:
- Pencils
- Erasers
- Pens
- Dry erase markers
- Paper towels
- Disinfecting wipes
- Copy paper
- Storage bins
- Scissors
Pay your Las Vegas parking ticket with school supplies, and know that your money is actually going to something useful! Here is the full list of supplies that are needed.
10 Skills We Lost To Technology: Before The 90’s We Actually Knew How To Do Stuff
Before the 90's came along, we had some skills. We knew how to do things. We had some natural talents
We lost a lot of skills to technology. Before the '90s and the advancement of technology, people had a unique, and natural, and cool set of skills to help them get through the day. Like remembering phone numbers.
We Lost our Skills To Technology - What 90's Skills Do You Still Have
Used to be that we knew all our family and friends phone numbers. How many phone numbers do you actually remember now? It really was quite the skill to remember phone numbers. Why should you now?
Your contacts are in your phone now. Until your phone dies, or you lose your phone. Or maybe you're in jail, and you only get that one phone call, but they confiscated your phone - now what?? Technology fails us quite often, yet we still rely on our phone to remember phone numbers.
A while back, I had a conversation with a friend about those trivial skills those of us had, who were before 1990. And a fun Reddit thread got into it. What trivial skills do you possess, that no one uses anymore? The 90's weren't that long ago, but when it comes to technology - that's a very long time.
Back in the 90's a lot of people used to actually develop and processing their own film. Yes - develop their own pictures from a roll of film. That was in a camera. Many would also enlarge those pictures, in a darkroom. Whaaaat? Film? Camera? DARKROOM??
Technology Took Away The Dewey Decimal System.
Ahh, yes, the Dewey Decimal System at the library. We all used it if we wanted to find a book. I'm sure many of you are saying "Dewey Decimal? Is that fractions? Or wait - that's Donald Duck's kid, right?"
We also gained some skills. 30 years ago, it would've been a LOT harder to arrange for a stranger to pick you up in their Toyota Prius, and give you a ride home from the bar. Now, we can do that within a few minutes, without even talking to anyone. I'm sure some would call it a "skill."
Now let's go back in time. Here are 10 skills we lost to technology.
Curly Telephone Cords
Sitting on the phone with the long cord - closed in the laundry room, so we could have privacy - was the best. And after that , we were all fully capable of unknotting the curly telephone wire, and getting all the curls facing the right way, and behaving themselves.

Fixing The TV
Remember when you could fix your TV's reception with one smack to the top of it, a la Fonzie? Heck - remember when you could actually fix (repair) a TV? Now if it breaks you might as well just buy a new one, because they are basically disposable.

Counting Change
The ability to make and count out change for a purchase didn't take an economics degree! "Hi cashier - it's $9.91, I gave you $10.01, not a live alligator! GIVE ME A DIME BACK!"

Clutch Starting A Car
Wait, what? Yes - we could actually start a car with manual transmission by rolling down a hill, with the car in gear, then pop the clutch and start it! (Cars weren't so reliable back in the day...)

Paper Fortune Tellers
Do you remember those? Making paper fortune tellers were a must - especially if you had a bestie, or liked a boy or girl .It would basically tell you your whole future.

Texting With 10 Keys On A Cell Phone
Most 90's kids still have it all memorized and could probably pick up a flip phone and send paragraphs if needed. But anyone born well after the 90's has no idea what it was like if you needed to shift from lower case to caps. You had to start all over. (Ask your parents)

Setting Up A VCR
Ok, stop laughing - setting up a VCR to record a television program in advance was a big deal. Because if you missed a TV show you just missed it! Until rerun season.

Cursive Writing
Learning to write fancy. That capital Q was the toughest to learn. Sadly, I don't know that cursive writing will ever be a thing again.

Recording A Song From The Radio
It was a TRUE SKILL! Recording a song, onto a cassette tape, from the radio. You had to do it so very masterfully, so as not to get the stupid DJ talking, or some stupid ad.

Before the 90's we knew how to do stuff

Refolding A Paper Map
After you stopped at the gas station to buy a fresh new map. you had to fold it back up neatly once you reached your vacation destination. If you've never done it, try it. Enough said.

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