Floyd Blog
About WDFloyd
Dave Floyd is an attorney, real estate broker, real estate investor, and trivia host in Austin, Texas. He works with the Foskitt Law Office and is an owner of Floyd Real Estate. He lives in the Zilker Neighborhood, and is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin and the Washington & Lee University School of Law.
Showing posts with label Prism Risk Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prism Risk Management. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Risks to Schools and School Districts from Students' Online Statements
Check out the latest post on the +Prism Risk Management, LLC Blog: Risks to Schools and School Districts from Students' Online Statements
Thursday, January 3, 2013
Highlights of 2012: Bryce Canyon
I went on several fun road trips in 2012. One of my favorite stops was a pit stop I made at Bryce Canyon National Park in southwestern Utah. Like the mountains of Zion National Park and the expanse of the Grand Canyon, Bryce Canyon is part of the massive and layered sedimentary Grand Staircase formation which covers much of southern Utah and northern Arizona.
I reached Bryce Canyon at the end of the sightseeing portion of a road trip which had begun in Phoenix. I was scheduled to attend the spring Association of Government Risk Pools conference as representative of Prism Risk Management (appropriate, as the company was operating the Texas Schools Property & Casualty Cooperative and Oklahoma Schools Property & Casualty Cooperative) the week before SXSW. Since I was flying to Arizona anyway, I moved the flight back a couple of days to allow for a short road trip. Sedona, Flagstaff, Grand Canyon, and Zion National Park went on the list immediately Bryce was a last minute decision.
| example of hoodoos |
| Dixie Nat'l Forest |
Northern Arizona and southwestern Utah are amazingly beautiful parts of the country. I'll hit a few of the trip highlights later in the month. Bryce Canyon was definitely the right way to end things. In order to get there, I left Zion and drove north toward the Dixie National Forest. The most prominent feature of this area was the bright red sandstone with little hoodoos popping up on the top of pine tree covered ridges. This was a good prelude to the geologic features of Bryce Canyon National Park.
Once you leave the most scenic parts of the Dixie National Forest, the road seems non-descript without the contrast of the oddly formed red rocks to the evergreens. At the edge of Dixie, you turn north on Highway 89 and then turn onto Highway 12. Within about 30 minutes you'll arrive at the entrance to Bryce Canyon National Park, which the National Park Service as:
Bryce Canyon, famous for its worldly unique geology, consists of a series of horseshoe-shaped amphitheaters carved from the eastern edge of the Paunsaugunt Plateau. The erosional force of frost-wedging and the dissolving power of rainwater have shaped the colorful limestone rock of the Claron Formation into bizarre shapes, including slot canyons, windows, fins, and spires called "hoodoos".There is more to the park than the main amphitheater, but that's the feature which upstages everything else and really forms the basis of making the decision to drive deep into an sparsely populated region of Utah.
| Hoodoos in the Amphitheater |
Bryce Canyon was a pleasant and unexpected surprise built into the March road trip. It took me about eight hours to drive from Bryce Canyon National Park back to Phoenix; however, the route involved a lot of back roads and was rather indirect until I hit Flagstaff. If you want to take a more direct route to Bryce Canyon (or to Zion National Park), your best bet appears to be flying into Vegas and then driving up I-15 into Utah. You could also fly into Salt Lake City, but then you wouldn't be able to play craps at the end of your wholesome road trip.
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Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Distributed Denial of Service Attacks Pose Risks to Schools and Business
Prism Risk Management just added a post to the Texas Schools Property and Casualty Cooperative blog entitled: Distributed Denial of Service Attacks Pose Risks to Schools and Business
This article was originally posted to the Prism Risk Management blog on October 23, 2012.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Monday, November 26, 2012
Monday, November 12, 2012
Monday, November 5, 2012
Monday, October 29, 2012
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the latest post on the +Prism Risk Management, LLC Blog: From Hacking to Sexting, School Districts Face Both Common and Unique Cyber Risks
Monday, October 8, 2012
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the latest post on the +Prism Risk Management, LLC Blog: New Regulations Issued for Protection of Children's Privacy Online
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the latest post on the Prism Risk Management Blog: Cyber Risk Insurance: When Conventional Liability Coverage Might Not Be Enough
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the new post on the +Prism Risk Management, LLC Blog: Copper Theft Presents Significant Risks to Businesses
Monday, August 27, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the latest post on the Prism Risk Management Blog: International Privacy Group Issues Recommendations on Cloud Computing Policy
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Monday, August 13, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the new post on the Prism Risk Management Blog: Water Scarcity Means Risks for the Enterprise and Public Sectors. If you're interested in recent actions of the LCRA or the Texas Water Development Board, this is a good post to read.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the new post on the +Prism Risk Management, LLC Blog: Generic Top Level Domains and Protection of Your Trademark Rights
Monday, July 30, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the new posting on the Prism Risk Management Blog: Protecting Your Online Identity and Reputation, Part 2
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Prism Risk Management Blog
Check out the new post on the Prism Risk Management Blog: Protecting Your Online Identity and Reputation, Part 1
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