Thursday, January 14, 2010

Such sudden largess was greeted happily

Such sudden largess was greeted happily by money-crunched cheap aion gold officials like Pamela Knorr, the administrative officer in Alpine County, who volunteered to hunt down her county’s one mysterious resident.

“We’re so small, I probably know who it is,” Ms. Knorr said. “I’d love to the bearer of good news for once.”

All told, the state issued about 450,000 i.o.u.’s valued at more than $2.6 billion to taxpayers, vendors and contractors in July after it aion money failed to close a budget gap on time and started to run out of money.

The state started redeeming the i.o.u.’s, with interest, in September after a budget was passed, but some people apparently did not get the message.

Mr. Chiang speculated that some residents might have been aion account confused by the i.o.u.’s, which were labeled as registered warrants, the bureaucratic parlance for the notes. Or, he said, “they might have other things on their mind.”

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