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Busy New Year’s Eve for Greater Sudbury Police
Numerous charges laid including impaired driving and assaulting a peace officer
Jan 2, 2021 12:00 PM By: Sudbury.com Staff
Updated
Greater Sudbury Police Service had a busy start to the new year.
The Traffic Management Unit checked 371 vehicles in Greater Sudbury that night, conducting 12 roadside screening tests and 11 mandatory alcohol screening tests.
These checks resulted in four impaired driving charges, 18 Highway Traffic Act violations and five other charges, police said today.
In one incident, at 8:45 p.m. on Dec. 31, plain clothes GSPS officers reported observing a vehicle park outside a Kathleen Street establishment. The two men who exited the vehicle appeared to be under the influence, police said.
Michael Saunderson
The Government has received a donation of 650 kilometres of fibre-optic cable from local cable television providers and the island’s two major toll road operators, to help improve the nation’s broadband connectivity.
The cable television operators include the island’s two largest cable providers and 34 smaller rural cable providers.
“The fibre-optic cables will form part of the National Fibre Optic Communication Backbone to enable high-speed data services among public Government facilities. We’ve been fortunate to have a good response from the private sector, specifically private owners of fibre-optic cables,” Operations Manager, Traffic Management Unit at the National Works Agency (NWA), Michael Saunderson, said.
Operations Manager, Traffic Management Unit at the National Works Agency, Michael Saunderson, speaking at a press conference on national broadband connectivity, hosted by Ministry of Science, Energy and Technology on December 15, 2020, at the Ministry’s Kingston Office - Contributed photo.
The Government has received a donation of 650 kilometres of fibre-optic cable from local cable television providers and the island’s two major toll road operators to help improve the nation’s broadband connectivity. The cable television operators include the island’s two largest cable providers and 34 smaller rural cable providers. “The fibre-optic cables will form part of the National Fibre Optic Communication Backbone to enable high-speed data services among public government facilities. We’ve been fortunate to have a good response from the private sector, specifically private owners of fibre-optic cables,” Operations Manager, Traffic Management Unit at the National Works Age
Low traffic neighbourhoods could become crime hot spots , police warn
Police have found roads closed with planters and bollards are allowing criminal to flee officers making them potential criminal hot spots
19 December 2020 • 7:00pm
Campaigners against low traffic neighbourhoods have held a series of demonstrations across the country
Credit: Heathcliff O Malley
Roads closed with planters and bollard as part of Grant Shapps’s “green transport revolution” risk creating crime “hot spots”, police have warned.
The Metropolitan Police Service has written to councils expressing “concerns” that street closures introduced to create low traffic neighbourhoods could slow 999 response times and even encourage criminals to favour those areas because they can more easily escape pursuing officers.