Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. My name is Carol, and I m your event operator today. I would like to welcome everyone to today s conference, Public Service Enterprise Group s Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. [Operator Instructions] Today, August 3, 2021, and will be available beginning at 2:00 p.M. Eastern Standard Time today as an audio webcast on PSEG s corporate website at investor.pseg.com.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Carlotta Chan. Please go ahead.
Carlotta N. Chan
ice President of Investor Relations
Thank you, Carol. Good morning, and thank you for participating in our earnings call. PSEG s second quarter 2021 earnings release, attachments and slides detailing operating results by company are posted on our website at investor.pseg.com, and our 10-Q will be filed shortly. The earnings release and other matters discussed during today s call contain forward-looking statements and estimates that are subj
Queensland Police in Townsville are being forced to watch juveniles speed past in stolen cars due to the state’s controversial no pursuit policy.
Sky News accompanied Townsville officers on an evening patrol and despite multiple speeding and stolen vehicles being spotted, they were not able to be intercepted.
It comes amid an escalating youth crime crisis in Townsville, with police laying 1,279 property crime charges this year alone. Of those, 615 have been levelled against juvenile offenders.
Senior Sergeant Jason Brosnan explained that there are currently very few circumstances when police can chase a stolen vehicle at speed.
“If someone’s about to go and commit a murder or take someone’s life, then we can pursue”, Senior Sergeant Brosnan told Sky News.
“The benefit and the necessity to intercept that vehicle has to be weighed up with the danger and the risk to the public.”
While the no pursuit policy has been legislated since 2011, the public rarely gets to see
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Good Tuesday morning!
There will be just one gubernatorial debate: Tonight at 7:00 on NJ 101.5.
GOP gubernatorial candidate Hirsh Singh, running his fourth campaign for office in as many years, demanded NJ PBS hold tomorrow s planned debate in person despite previously agreeing to the format. He also refused to take a COVID test ahead of it. So the network pulled the plug.
Credit: (PSEG)
Kim Hanemann will succeed David Daly as president of PSE&G, effective June 30.
Kim Hanemann, an executive who guided Public Electric & Gas through an aggressive program of expanding its transmission assets, has been named president of New Jersey’s largest gas and electric utility. She would become the first woman to head the utility in its 118-year history.
Hanemann will succeed David Daly, the current president of PSE&G, effective June 30. Daly will retire at the end of this year, after 35 years with the utility, serving as the top executive at PSE&G since October 2017. His stewardship accelerated the company’s transition to cleaner energy, including a program to get customers to use less energy and to promote greater reliance on electric vehicles.
Hanemann Becomes First Woman to Serve as President of PSE&G On May 24, 2021
Kim Hanemann will become president and chief operating officer of Public Service Electric & Gas (PSE&G), effective June 30. The first woman to lead the state’s largest electric and gas utility in its 118-year history, she makes the move upon the retirement of President David M. Daily who has been with the company for 35 years.
Hanemann joined PSE&G as an associate engineer in 1986 and has held leadership positions in transmission, electric and gas field operations. She was named to her current role in 2019, where she is responsible for PSE&G’s transmission, electric, gas and customer operations, as well as the company’s asset management and centralized services organizations. She also oversees execution of the company’s large utility construction projects.