What s the most alarming sustainability-related stat you ve heard recently?
There are many alarming sustainability related statistics. However, one that stands out to me personally, because my husband and 10 year old daughter enjoy sea fishing together, is that by the year 2050 there will be more plastic by weight than fish in the ocean! This is why it is so important that HP has sourced more than 60 million bottles of ocean-bound plastic, that might otherwise have reached waterways and oceans, for inclusion into HP products.
Have you or your company s outlook towards sustainability changed in the last year?
HP s commitment to sustainability is embedded in our DNA and at all levels of the company. The climate crisis is an unprecedented challenge demanding immediate action across private and public sectors. This month, HP announced extensive and ambitious climate action goals, focusing on carbon emissions, circularity and forest protection and restoration. One of our goals is to d
The local elections will take place on Thursday 6th May. 0 April 19, 2021 16:28 by Lauren McGaun
Lauren McGaun
Next month, UoN students will have the chance to head to the polls once again, this time to elect Nottinghamshire’s new Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC).
The job of the Commissioner is to oversee all policing across Nottinghamshire, providing a voice to the people by ensuring there is police accountability.
Three candidates are running for the role, with the Conservatives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats each vying for the position.
Impact’s News Editor Lauren McGaun caught up with Labour’s Paddy Tipping and the Liberal Democrat’s David Watts to find out more about why they were running for the role.
Candidates revealed for one of the top jobs at Nottinghamshire Police
The elections are being held on May 6
14:44, 9 APR 2021
Updated
Left to Right - Paddy Tipping, Caroline Henry and David Watts are standing at this year s election to become Nottinghamshire s Police and Crime Commissioner
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The Faculty of Law at the Mona Campus of the University of the West Indies (UWI) has warned that despite being a new Bill, the National Identification and Registration Act (NIRA) (2020) still contains some of the privacy concerns that saw it being struck down in the Constitutional Court in April 2019.
At that time, the Full Court, comprising of Chief Justice Bryan Sykes and Justices Lisa Palmer and David Watts, sided with former People’s National Party General Secretary, Julian Robinson, that certain aspects of the controversial legislation breached the rights of Jamaicans to privacy as is guaranteed by the constitution.
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