Notary Public in Castleton, Vermont | Welcome to the notary public and signing agent listing for Castleton, Vermont, where you can find a qualified notary to assist with a loan signing or any other notarization allowed by law. Notary public profiles in this archive were current as of 12/31/2013. | |  | Notary Public in Castleton, VT Go Back to Vermont Index | | County list: according to our records, Castleton is in or near the following county(ies): Rutland, Addison, Bennington, Windsor | | INSTRUCTIONS: To view detailed profiles, click the ZIP Code link in the list below to access our notary search engine. On that page, click Search. Locate your notary in the search results. | |
| Search in ZIP Code: 05735 |
|  | I believe care, communication, and creative solutions for any obstacles lead to the best results for the hiring organization, the signers, and the notary. I am interested in electronic notarization, and am very familiar with computer programming and office software. Due to my technical background and interest in digital signatures I participated as an observer in the revision committee for the Revised Uniform Law on Notarial Acts. I attended a forum for Vermont notaries sponsored by the Vermont Secretary of State in 2012.
No charge extra if the total number of pages, including the signer's copy, is no more than 300 pages. About mileage: the mileage shown in the "Find a Notary" page on the Notary Rotary web site is a straight-line distance. My experience indicates the mileage should be multiplied by about 1.5 to estimate the one-way road distance. |
| | This profile was last updated on 12/30/2013 3:05:00 PM. | | 24 Hr Service: Yes | | Has Laser Printer: Yes | | Recent Notary Talk Threads Authored by this Notary: | | Identifying minors; more passports than you'd think Posted by VT_Syrup at 12/19/2013 8:33:00 AM | Last night I served as a volunteer examiner for amateur radio licenses. Around 8 of the candidates were Boy Scouts, and they had to present ID just like the adults. I was surprised that about half of them had passports. |
| | | Does NY State require venues on certificates? Posted by VT_Syrup at 10/1/2013 6:52:00 PM | I had two documents to notarize today, one drawn up by a New York attorney, another was a "New York State Estate Tax Domicile Affidavit" (form ET-141). Neither had a place for the venue. I added the venue to comply with my state notary manual, but I wonder if New York even requires a venue? |
| | | Use of California perjury clause by non-California notaries Posted by VT_Syrup at 9/19/2013 12:02:00 PM | There have been some comments on the board from non-California notaries who have been sent acknowledgements to complete that were written just like the California acknowledgement certificate, except "California" was replaced with the name of the state where the acknowledgement was to be taken. There was particular concern with this sentence:
"I certify under PENALTY OF PERJURY under the laws of the State of [wherever] that the foregoing paragraph is true and correct."
I didn't think this statement was a good idea; recently I've had several more request to use this, so I emailed Kathy Watters, our state's Notary Public Administrator. She stated "The sentence you are referring to is definitely out of place in an acknowledgement. The acknowledgement language prior to that is not exactly typical either. I suppose in California, where fraud is much more prevalent than here in Vermont, the powers that be insist on this extra language to ensure that the notary has identified the person before them to his or her satisfaction."
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| | | Anyone a justice of the peace Posted by VT_Syrup at 9/9/2013 12:51:00 PM | Are any forum member a justice of the peace? Any pluses or minuses with respect to notary work? (In my state it's an elective office; I get the feeling there isn't a long line of people in my town clamoring for the office. I am aware it would involve some volunteer duties such as sitting on tax appeals and helping with elections.) |
| | | Silly commission numbers Posted by VT_Syrup at 8/26/2013 7:14:00 PM | I don't want to hijack Marianne's thread below, but sometimes not having a commission number can be silly.
Vermont notaries don't have commission numbers, don't have to print their name (just signing is fine), don't have to use a seal, and don't have to write their commission expiration date. (Even if they did, it wouldn't help distinguish one notary from another with the same name, because all Vermont commissions expire on the same date, February 10, 2015.) Just imagine having an illegible scrawl for the notary's signature, and nothing else to help figure out who he/she is. |
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