Ticket reversed after parking commissionaire tells business owner come back when you learn English Hadeel Ibrahim © Submitted by Yamama Zein Alabdin Yamama Zein Alabdin and her family moved to Canada five years ago, and opened two businesses in Saint John.
The City of Saint John has reversed a ticket after a parking commissionaire told a business owner to come back when she learned English, and ticketed her $100.
Yamama Zein Alabdin was parked in a loading zone and was unloading supplies Monday morning. She was inside her restaurant Mashawi Zein on Germain Street when her son told her the car was being ticketed.
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Andree Kehn/Sun Journal Published on December 17, 2020
On a Monday in early November, Associate Professor of Biology Brett Huggett was listening in on the state’s daily COVID-19 briefing, when a term used by Dr. Nirav Shah, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, caught his attention: ultra-cold storage.
That day, Nov. 9, Pfizer had just announced extremely positive findings from its early analysis of its coronavirus vaccine. And already, Shah was planning, in what Mainers had come to know as his cautiously optimistic way, to be ready if the vaccine was authorized for use.
“As you note,” Shah said to one reporter during the briefing. “It does require ultra-cold storage.” Minus 80 degrees Celsius, to be precise, or minus 112 degrees Fahrenheit.