Surge in Covid fines issued by police - here s the latest Bradford cases MORE than 3,000 fines were issued by police in West Yorkshire for breaches of Covid-19 laws over Christmas and the start of this year, figures show – around three-quarters of all fines issued since the start of the pandemic. Figures published by the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) reveal a total of 4,125 fixed penalty notices were recorded as being issued by West Yorkshire Police between March 27 last year and April 18 this year. They include 3,064 fines after December 20 – 74 per cent of the total handed out by officers since the pandemic began. The figures also show the number of fines issued over more recent weeks, with 737 given out by officers between March 14 and April 18.
Policy Proposal to Boost Economic Growth Includes Online Capital Formation, Digital Assets and More
Earlier this year,
Senator Pat Toomey, the ranking member of the
Senate Banking Committee, issued a call for policy proposals that could boost economic growth. Key policy moves designed to generate more jobs and improve prosperity are always needed – even more so on the heels of a health crisis.
One of the submissions forwarded to the Committee came from two economic policy experts,
Norbert Michel. Burton is Senior Fellow in Economic Policy, Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies, Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity, at The Heritage Foundation. Michel is Director, Center for Data Analysis, at The Heritage Foundation.
21 Best Summer Foods - Healthiest Fruits & Vegetables to Eat in Summer womansday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from womansday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
An organization representing more than 20,000 farmers across the country is urging the federal government to follow a key takeaway from a report it recently published on Canada’s shortcomings in agro-environmental policy by using next week’s budget to dish out funding for farming practices that tackle greenhouse-gas emissions (GHGs).
The document, released by Farmers for Climate Solutions and co-authored by the International Institute for Sustainable Development, shows the federal government’s policies to reduce emissions in agriculture pale in comparison to those of other countries.
As Canada’s farming-related emissions are projected to increase until 2030, the report reveals that the U.S. spends 13 times more per farm acre than Canada on programs supporting environmentally friendly agriculture. The European Union spends 73 times more per farm acre on such programs than Canada.
Samuel Snider will make history when he is sworn in as mayor of Willard at 7 p.m. April 26 at the Willard Community Center, 222 W. Jackson St.
He almost certainly is both the youngest mayor and the first Black mayor in the history of Willard, a city of about 6,000 incorporated in 1949.
David Burton was managing editor of the Cross Country Times, now defunct, from 1989 to 1993, in Willard.
Is Snider the youngest mayor and first Black mayor in Willard? It s very likely, Burton tells me.
Snider also just might be the first in both categories in the history of I would think he s pretty well got both of those locked up for Greene County, says John Sellars, executive director of the History Museum on the Square.