<html>
<body>
The last time I registered a bike in San Diego (more than two years ago),
the bike shop did not have "expires in ____" stickers to go
along with the "registered" sticker. There's no way to tell by
looking if those bikes are legally registered. Is that a good thing? No.
<br><br>
At 07:06 AM 3/11/2007, John Eldon wrote:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">I still have an expires-in-1976
Los Angeles Bike Licence sticker on my 1970 Peugeot UO-8. <br>
<br>
My 1960 Capo has an early 1960s San Diego bicycle license which some
bureaucrat plastered right over the Reynolds 531 decal! From what I have
seen on the Internet, mine is not an isolated instance.<br>
<br>
John E.<br><br>
----- Original Message ----<br>
From: "JonIsaacs@aol.com" <JonIsaacs@aol.com><br>
To: sdcbc@bikesandiego.org<br>
Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 6:10:10 AM<br>
Subject: Re: [SDCBC] While we are busy citing cvc21200 and
cvc21202...<br><br>
<font size=2>In a message dated 3/11/07 4:07:15 AM Pacific Standard Time,
gcarman@san.rr.com writes:<br><br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">.>>How many of you are in
compliance? </font></blockquote></blockquote></body>
<br>
</html>