comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Old toll booth - Page 1 : comparemela.com

COVID-19 enforcement: Zero tickets handed out at road checks during B C s travel ban

  VANCOUVER Police never ticketed anyone at the road checks set up to enforce B.C. s temporary travel ban, which is being lifted on Tuesday. B.C. first announced its travel ban, prohibiting locals from moving between three health regions, on April 23. The rules were meant to help curb the spread of COVID-19 and on June 15, that ban is being lifted.  Starting on May 6, the RCMP established regular road checks highway points between the health regions. Those included checks at Highway 1 near Boston Bar, Highway 3 near Manning Park, Highway 5 near Old Toll Booth and Highway 99 near Lillooet. Between May 6 and June 12, Mounties say they checked 14,193 vehicles at those road blocks. Of those, 236 drivers voluntarily turned around. Another 26 were told by police they must turn around, but no tickets were issued, Mounties confirmed with CTV News Vancouver.

COVID-19 travel checkpoints: 2 cars that didn t stop weren t actually fined say B C RCMP

  VANCOUVER The RCMP says that the two cars that blew past police and didn’t stop at COVID-19 checkpoints over the May long weekend weren’t ticketed. Over the weekend, B.C. RCMP provided information about how many cars were stopped at the force’s four travel checkpoints, and said that two cars that had failed to stop at the Old Toll Booth checkpoint on Friday, May 21, were also ticketed with $230 fines. However, on Tuesday, Sgt. Janelle Shoihet sent an email to CTV News Vancouver and said that no tickets had been issued. “There appears to be a reporting error from the field,” she said.

B C RCMP provide early update on COVID-19 travel checkpoints for May long weekend

B C RCMP provide early update on COVID-19 travel checkpoints for May long weekend
bc.ctvnews.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bc.ctvnews.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New COVID-19 cases for Kootenay Boundary continues to decrease

by Lone Sheep Publishing on Wednesday May 19 2021 Fernie had the highest number of cases at 11 while with Castlegar reporting six, Nelson five and Cranbrook and Trail each with four. According to the Geographic Distribution of COVID-19 by Local Health Area of Case Residence map updated Wednesday on the B.C. Centre of Disease Control website, COVID-19 cases in the Kootenay Boundary region continue to decrease. The update graphic, from May 9-15, 2021, shows new cases spiralling downward in most health districts. The Local Health Area of Case Residence map shows Fernie with the highest number of cases at 11. Castlegar with six has the next highest number of COVID-19 cases, followed by Nelson with five and Cranbrook and Trail with four.

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.