Stonham Barns Steam and Vintage Show had some impressive displays
- Credit: Sonya Duncan
Over the weekend families from across Suffolk headed to Stonham Aspal for the first rural show since the coronavirus pandemic began.
Vintage tractors, traction engines, and steam rollers were amongst the vehicles on display at Stonham Barns, which also hosted its usual weekend car boot sale.
There were lots of historic vehicles at Stonham Barns Steam and Vintage Show
- Credit: Sonya Duncan
Alan Forward, Stonham Barns Owner said: The event is one of our most popular events of the year. There s nothing more inspiring than attending a steam and vintage show.
View Comments
Pataskala City Administrator Tim Hickin predicts the first scheduled June meeting of Pataskala City Council will look a lot more like those typically held before the global pandemic.
Citing lifting of state health mandates expected to kick-in June 2, Hickin said, “I would expected this chambers will return to what it used to look like for the first meeting in June.”
“Citizens will be allowed to come back in, directors will be back up along the sides (of the council chambers room) and your daises will all be next to each other,” Hickin said.
Throughout the pandemic, council members have been masked and sitting several feet apart, managers spread-out throughout the chambers, and the public invited to come in one-at-a-time for any public comment.
Dear Editor:
I am hoping to be elected as this year’s moderator for Canton’s annual town meeting. ATM is scheduled to be held on Saturday, May 22, at 12:30 p.m. The plan is for it to last until all business has been concluded. Town leaders are working hard to plan a safe and efficient meeting. It will be held outdoors, with appropriate spacing, at Canton High School’s Memorial Field, and we are asking everyone to wear masks. There are 42 articles, including some that were postponed from last year’s ATM. Based on my prior experience, it would normally take five to six hours, and two or more meetings to dispose of all articles to handle all articles in the usual manner.
Two days before Christmas, the owner of a small family nursing home forwarded an email to this newspaper with a document he had been desperately waiting for.
It was a Covid-19 vaccination schedule for nursing homes, listing the dates they could expect residents and staff to be immunised. The start date was January 11, but his nursing home was scheduled for the end of the month. We can t wait four weeks, he said on the phone. We ve managed to keep the virus away from our residents and out of this home all year. We re at the end of our tether here.