GM, union mandate masks at Wentzville plant
“If there’s one person not vaccinated we still have to do our due diligence on keeping everyone safe at the end of the day,” said Jamison. Author: Holden Kurwicki Updated: 6:30 PM CDT July 21, 2021
WENTZVILLE, Mo. For workers at GM’s Wentzville assembly plant in St. Charles County, masks are now mandatory across all shifts.
It’s no secret that the pandemic has caused big problems across the auto industry.
“We’re trying to stay safe for the pandemic along with the chip shortage that we’ve been having it’s been a learning curve but we’re here to meet the demands and do what we can safely,” said United Auto Workers Local 2250 President Frederick Jamison.
Published:
4:43 PM April 13, 2021
The scene of the early morning crash on a village road in Somerleyton. Picture: NS Police Dogs Twitter
- Credit: NS Police Dogs Twitter
A man who was arrested after allegedly fleeing the scene of a crash was found to be almost four times the legal drink drive limit.
Police were called at 8.30pm on Friday, April 9 following reports a car had crashed into a wall on The Street in Somerleyton.
Officers from the Norfolk and Suffolk Roads and Armed Policing Team and the Norfolk and Suffolk Police Dog Unit responded.
The dog unit said Pd Harry tracked the driver into a field and he was soon found hidden in brambles in the bottom of a ditch.
Published:
4:43 PM April 13, 2021
The scene of the early morning crash on a village road in Somerleyton. Picture: NS Police Dogs Twitter
- Credit: NS Police Dogs Twitter
A man who was arrested after allegedly fleeing the scene of a crash was found to be almost four times the legal drink drive limit.
Police were called at 8.30pm on Friday, April 9 following reports a car had crashed into a wall on The Street in Somerleyton.
Officers from the Norfolk and Suffolk Roads and Armed Policing Team and the Norfolk and Suffolk Police Dog Unit responded.
The dog unit said Pd Harry tracked the driver into a field and he was soon found hidden in brambles in the bottom of a ditch.
Maryland is increasing its screening and genetic sequencing of coronavirus test results to look for the presence of more-contagious variants that appear to already be circulating around the state.
In a news conference Tuesday afternoon, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced the state has signed agreements with the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins University that will double the state’s overall capacity to perform sequencing, which refers to examining the genetic structure of the virus.
“This enhanced capacity will enable us to screen and sequence over 10% of all COVID-19 cases, giving Maryland one of the strongest surveillance programs in America,” Hogan said.