Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year, requires no
servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data per user, would
include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows access from
off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all federal standards for
message retention regulations via Google's Postini service. Future computer
purchases would not require the full suite of MSOffice products, and you
could get by with netbook computers that simply have access to the internet.
I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just so painful to
watch how the public sector is so backwards.
> Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
> 2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
> considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
> and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
> and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
> backup file is also corrupt.
> If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
> via the google group or my home email.
> On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> > FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> > email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> > webpage. -Teresa
With FOIA rules on document retention I am not sure that would run afoul of th rules if your docs are in cyberspace not under your direct control. The laws are usually twenty years plus behind reality.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> Sent: Tue Nov 03 14:22:09 2009
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year, requires no servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data per user, would include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows access from off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all federal standards for message retention regulations via Google's Postini service. Future computer purchases would not require the full suite of MSOffice products, and you could get by with netbook computers that simply have access to the internet.
I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just so painful to watch how the public sector is so backwards.
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:04 PM, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
The future is definately not relying on a server computer stored in some
City Hall office that can burn out. It's having data mirrored across
several servers scattered around the country (cloud computing) that can be
accessed from anytime and anywhere. Hurricane or Tornado wipes out City
Hall - ground to a halt.
Fire or sprinkler system douses City Hall - ground to a halt.
I've been involved in bidding on the new NYC 911 call center, and it's given
me a whole new lesson in redundancy. Google Apps provides that surety over
the current state. All the convincing it took for me was one internal mail
server hard drive to go down, and the subsequent all-nighter trying to get
things corrected with a service call to some guy with a strong accent in a
non-USA location. Done with that!
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:30 PM, McCreery, Edward P.
<emccre...@pullcom.com>wrote:
> With FOIA rules on document retention I am not sure that would run afoul of
> th rules if your docs are in cyberspace not under your direct control. The
> laws are usually twenty years plus behind reality.
> You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
> City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year, requires
> no servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data per user,
> would include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows access from
> off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all federal standards for
> message retention regulations via Google's Postini service. Future computer
> purchases would not require the full suite of MSOffice products, and you
> could get by with netbook computers that simply have access to the internet.
> I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just so painful
> to watch how the public sector is so backwards.
> On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:04 PM, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org>wrote:
>> Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
>> 2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
>> considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
>> and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
>> and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
>> backup file is also corrupt.
>> If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
>> via the google group or my home email.
>> On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
>> > FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
>> > email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
>> > webpage. -Teresa
Each of our 3 main offices backs up in the other 2 and off site.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Tom Harbinson - Personal
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:46 PM
To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
20yrs retention of electronic formats? That can be dangerous. When was
the last time you saw a 5 1/4" floppy drive?
The future is definately not relying on a server computer stored in some
City Hall office that can burn out. It's having data mirrored across
several servers scattered around the country (cloud computing) that can
be accessed from anytime and anywhere. Hurricane or Tornado wipes out
City Hall - ground to a halt.
Fire or sprinkler system douses City Hall - ground to a halt.
I've been involved in bidding on the new NYC 911 call center, and it's
given me a whole new lesson in redundancy. Google Apps provides that
surety over the current state. All the convincing it took for me was
one internal mail server hard drive to go down, and the subsequent
all-nighter trying to get things corrected with a service call to some
guy with a strong accent in a non-USA location. Done with that!
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:30 PM, McCreery, Edward P.
With FOIA rules on document retention I am not sure that would
run afoul of th rules if your docs are in cyberspace not under your
direct control. The laws are usually twenty years plus behind reality.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> Sent: Tue Nov 03 14:22:09 2009
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year,
requires no servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data
per user, would include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows
access from off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all
federal standards for message retention regulations via Google's Postini
service. Future computer purchases would not require the full suite of
MSOffice products, and you could get by with netbook computers that
simply have access to the internet.
I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just
so painful to watch how the public sector is so backwards.
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file
grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than
junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns
into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several
recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at
it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either
call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so
I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting
this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
Sorry - I did not say the law requires a 20 year retention. What I said
is the laws are usually 20 years behind the times. For example, a lot
of Ct's banking laws assume it is still 1950 and you are dealing with a
brick & mortar hometown bank on Main Street USA where you have to walk
in to do your banking. Ha.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Tom Harbinson - Personal
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:46 PM
To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
20yrs retention of electronic formats? That can be dangerous. When was
the last time you saw a 5 1/4" floppy drive?
The future is definately not relying on a server computer stored in some
City Hall office that can burn out. It's having data mirrored across
several servers scattered around the country (cloud computing) that can
be accessed from anytime and anywhere. Hurricane or Tornado wipes out
City Hall - ground to a halt.
Fire or sprinkler system douses City Hall - ground to a halt.
I've been involved in bidding on the new NYC 911 call center, and it's
given me a whole new lesson in redundancy. Google Apps provides that
surety over the current state. All the convincing it took for me was
one internal mail server hard drive to go down, and the subsequent
all-nighter trying to get things corrected with a service call to some
guy with a strong accent in a non-USA location. Done with that!
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:30 PM, McCreery, Edward P.
With FOIA rules on document retention I am not sure that would
run afoul of th rules if your docs are in cyberspace not under your
direct control. The laws are usually twenty years plus behind reality.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> Sent: Tue Nov 03 14:22:09 2009
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year,
requires no servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data
per user, would include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows
access from off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all
federal standards for message retention regulations via Google's Postini
service. Future computer purchases would not require the full suite of
MSOffice products, and you could get by with netbook computers that
simply have access to the internet.
I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just
so painful to watch how the public sector is so backwards.
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file
grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than
junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns
into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several
recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at
it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either
call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so
I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting
this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
Ahh, gotya on the clarify. I dropped my brk+mrtr bank 10yrs ago for
etrade. What's more impactful is newspapers not catching on that the
internet has changed their game. Freedom of the press is to precious to
flounder under market conditions where owners don't adopt to changing times,
but now we're getting off CC topic.
If memory serves me, your firm uses Postini for your backups - and Postini
happens to be a google service.
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 3:24 PM, McCreery, Edward P.
<emccre...@pullcom.com>wrote:
> Sorry - I did not say the law requires a 20 year retention. What I said
> is the laws are usually 20 years behind the times. For example, a lot of
> Ct's banking laws assume it is still 1950 and you are dealing with a brick &
> mortar hometown bank on Main Street USA where you have to walk in to do your
> banking. Ha.
> ------------------------------
> *From:* sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] *On
> Behalf Of *Tom Harbinson - Personal
> *Sent:* Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:46 PM
> *To:* sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
> *Subject:* SheltonCC Re: No Email
> 20yrs retention of electronic formats? That can be dangerous. When was
> the last time you saw a 5 1/4" floppy drive?
> Not sure on what govt requires in CT for FOI retention, but many govt
> bodies are jumping into it.
> Even the federal agency level of certification is coming:
> The future is definately not relying on a server computer stored in some
> City Hall office that can burn out. It's having data mirrored across
> several servers scattered around the country (cloud computing) that can be
> accessed from anytime and anywhere. Hurricane or Tornado wipes out City
> Hall - ground to a halt.
> Fire or sprinkler system douses City Hall - ground to a halt.
> I've been involved in bidding on the new NYC 911 call center, and it's
> given me a whole new lesson in redundancy. Google Apps provides that surety
> over the current state. All the convincing it took for me was one internal
> mail server hard drive to go down, and the subsequent all-nighter trying to
> get things corrected with a service call to some guy with a strong accent in
> a non-USA location. Done with that!
> On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:30 PM, McCreery, Edward P. <emccre...@pullcom.com
> > wrote:
>> With FOIA rules on document retention I am not sure that would run afoul
>> of th rules if your docs are in cyberspace not under your direct control.
>> The laws are usually twenty years plus behind reality.
>> You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
>> City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year, requires
>> no servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data per user,
>> would include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows access from
>> off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all federal standards for
>> message retention regulations via Google's Postini service. Future computer
>> purchases would not require the full suite of MSOffice products, and you
>> could get by with netbook computers that simply have access to the internet.
>> I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just so painful
>> to watch how the public sector is so backwards.
>> On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:04 PM, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org>wrote:
>>> Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
>>> 2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
>>> considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
>>> and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
>>> and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
>>> backup file is also corrupt.
>>> If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
>>> via the google group or my home email.
>>> On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
>>> > FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
>>> > email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
>>> > webpage. -Teresa
We recently switched from Postini to Mimecast. Only the IT people would
know why. They told me once but there was no need to tie up what few
brain cells I have left with that data.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Tom Harbinson - Personal
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 3:31 PM
To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
Ahh, gotya on the clarify. I dropped my brk+mrtr bank 10yrs ago for
etrade. What's more impactful is newspapers not catching on that the
internet has changed their game. Freedom of the press is to precious to
flounder under market conditions where owners don't adopt to changing
times, but now we're getting off CC topic.
If memory serves me, your firm uses Postini for your backups - and
Postini happens to be a google service.
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 3:24 PM, McCreery, Edward P.
Sorry - I did not say the law requires a 20 year retention.
What I said is the laws are usually 20 years behind the times. For
example, a lot of Ct's banking laws assume it is still 1950 and you are
dealing with a brick & mortar hometown bank on Main Street USA where you
have to walk in to do your banking. Ha.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
[mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Tom Harbinson -
Personal
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:46 PM
To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
20yrs retention of electronic formats? That can be dangerous.
When was the last time you saw a 5 1/4" floppy drive?
Not sure on what govt requires in CT for FOI retention, but many
govt bodies are jumping into it.
Even the federal agency level of certification is coming:
The future is definately not relying on a server computer stored
in some City Hall office that can burn out. It's having data mirrored
across several servers scattered around the country (cloud computing)
that can be accessed from anytime and anywhere. Hurricane or Tornado
wipes out City Hall - ground to a halt.
Fire or sprinkler system douses City Hall - ground to a halt.
I've been involved in bidding on the new NYC 911 call center,
and it's given me a whole new lesson in redundancy. Google Apps
provides that surety over the current state. All the convincing it took
for me was one internal mail server hard drive to go down, and the
subsequent all-nighter trying to get things corrected with a service
call to some guy with a strong accent in a non-USA location. Done with
that!
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:30 PM, McCreery, Edward P.
With FOIA rules on document retention I am not sure that
would run afoul of th rules if your docs are in cyberspace not under
your direct control. The laws are usually twenty years plus behind
reality.
________________________________
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
<sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
<sheltoncc@googlegroups.com> Sent: Tue Nov 03 14:22:09 2009
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user
per year, requires no servers on site to maintain, allows storage of
25GB of data per user, would include mail-calendar-document-website
creation, allows access from off-site, includes mobile device access,
and meets all federal standards for message retention regulations via
Google's Postini service. Future computer purchases would not require
the full suite of MSOffice products, and you could get by with netbook
computers that simply have access to the internet.
I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues.
Just so painful to watch how the public sector is so backwards.
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook
pst file grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails
other than junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file
turns into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run
several recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still
working at it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to
either call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently
corrupted so I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am
posting this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
So what happens to all your data if Google suddenly and without
warning goes bankrupt and turns all the servers off one day? Not that
a huge corporation could ever go bankrupt, ha ha.
<thomas.harbin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
> City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year, requires no
> servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data per user, would
> include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows access from
> off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all federal standards for
> message retention regulations via Google's Postini service. Future computer
> purchases would not require the full suite of MSOffice products, and you
> could get by with netbook computers that simply have access to the internet.
> I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just so painful to
> watch how the public sector is so backwards.
> On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:04 PM, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org>wrote:
> > Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
> > 2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
> > considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
> > and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
> > and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
> > backup file is also corrupt.
> > If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
> > via the google group or my home email.
> > On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> > > FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> > > email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> > > webpage. -Teresa
-----Original Message-----
From: Teresa G <sheltontra...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 13:39:18 To: Shelton Conservation Commission<sheltoncc@googlegroups.com>
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
So what happens to all your data if Google suddenly and without
warning goes bankrupt and turns all the servers off one day? Not that
a huge corporation could ever go bankrupt, ha ha.
On Nov 3, 2:22 pm, Tom Harbinson - Personal
<thomas.harbin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> You have GOT to be kidding me!! How lame is that?
> City should switch to google apps. It is $50 per user per year, requires no
> servers on site to maintain, allows storage of 25GB of data per user, would
> include mail-calendar-document-website creation, allows access from
> off-site, includes mobile device access, and meets all federal standards for
> message retention regulations via Google's Postini service. Future computer
> purchases would not require the full suite of MSOffice products, and you
> could get by with netbook computers that simply have access to the internet.
> I've been using google apps for 2yrs now with no issues. Just so painful to
> watch how the public sector is so backwards.
> On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:04 PM, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org>wrote:
> > Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
> > 2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
> > considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
> > and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
> > and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
> > backup file is also corrupt.
> > If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
> > via the google group or my home email.
> > On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> > > FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> > > email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> > > webpage. -Teresa
-----Original Message-----
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Teresa
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:04 PM
To: Shelton Conservation Commission
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
The property at Chordas Pond was acquired by the City from L'Hermitage
Development Inc. on October 28, 2009 according to a Certificate of
Foreclosure. There were twelve liens on the property.
-----Original Message-----
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Teresa
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:04 PM
To: Shelton Conservation Commission
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
-----Original Message-----
From: "Teresa Gallagher" <conservat...@cityofshelton.org>
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 11:43:02 To: <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com>
Subject: SheltonCC Chordas Pond Property
The property at Chordas Pond was acquired by the City from L'Hermitage
Development Inc. on October 28, 2009 according to a Certificate of
Foreclosure. There were twelve liens on the property.
-----Original Message-----
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Teresa
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:04 PM
To: Shelton Conservation Commission
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> webpage. -Teresa
-----Original Message-----
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of thomas.harbin...@gmail.com
Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 11:45 AM
To: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com
Subject: SheltonCC Re: Chordas Pond Property
Thx. Acreage apx?
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
-----Original Message-----
From: "Teresa Gallagher" <conservat...@cityofshelton.org>
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 11:43:02 To: <sheltoncc@googlegroups.com>
Subject: SheltonCC Chordas Pond Property
The property at Chordas Pond was acquired by the City from L'Hermitage
Development Inc. on October 28, 2009 according to a Certificate of
Foreclosure. There were twelve liens on the property.
-----Original Message-----
From: sheltoncc@googlegroups.com [mailto:sheltoncc@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Teresa
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 2:04 PM
To: Shelton Conservation Commission
Subject: SheltonCC Re: No Email
Still no email. The problem is that my Outlook pst file grew to over
2 GB because I didn't want to delete emails other than junk due to FOI
considerations. Apparently at 2 GB the pst file turns into a pumpkin
and is useless. The IT department has run several recovery attempts
and has been unsuccessful so far but is still working at it. The
backup file is also corrupt.
If anyone needs to contact me, you'll have to either call, or email
via the google group or my home email.
On Nov 2, 12:43 pm, Teresa <conservat...@cityofshelton.org> wrote:
> FYI, my work email pst file is apparently corrupted so I cannot get
> email at City Hall for the time being. I am posting this via the
> webpage. -Teresa