A total of 130 warnings and 102 tickets were issued for the week of May 17 to 23, including 96 $1,296 tickets to individuals for various offences and six $298 tickets to individuals for failure to wear a mask in indoor public places.
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Council is considering some major debt forgiveness.
At next weekâs council meeting, the cohort will discuss writing off $3,090,709 in provincial fines, which are deemed uncollectible at this point.
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Staff is recommending council approve a write-off plan that will wipe fines dating from 2010 to 2014. It will be the third time council has granted the absolution.
âIt was not until 2016 that the City of Greater Sudbury performed its first write-off of provincial offences fines,â a staff report headed to council next week indicates. âAt that time the write-off only applied to $283,816 of outstanding parking fines from 1988 to 2010. ⦠The City of Greater Sudburyâs second write-off was approved by council in 2018, writing off $3,451,847.60 in part I and part III offence fines.â
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Victoria Day holiday to affect City and Utilities Kingston schedules
May 17, 2021
City of Kingston and Utilities Kingston schedules will change due to the Victoria Day holiday.
The City’s Victoria Day festivities, including the fireworks, are cancelled again this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
City and Utilities Kingston Holiday Schedules
Garbage, Green Bin and recycling: There is no collection on Monday. Collection occurs the day after your regular collection day. Sign-up to receive collection reminders by phone, text or email at www.CityofKingston.ca/collection.
Kingston Transit: Bus service will operate on a Sunday schedule on Monday. Please see www.CityofKingston.ca/busdetours for COVID-19-related service changes.
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The City of North Bay is exploring new rules that would regulate the size, number and placement of election signs on public and private property.
Staff have prepared a report on a proposed election signs bylaw, which council is expected to refer to its general government committee Tuesday, where it will be discussed further before a formal recommendation is made on whether to adopt the regulations or not.
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Under the proposed bylaw, election signs would not be permitted on public property, except for on municipal road allowances and specific areas of certain parks already listed in an existing policy – Lee Park from Judge Avenue to James Street, Thomson Park beside Fisher Street, and the Main Street Overpass from Oak Street East to Judge Avenue.