The latest magistrates court results from Welwyn Hatfield, Potters Bar and surrounding areas.
- Credit: Archant
Allen James: 58, of Osborn House, Howardsgate, Welwyn Garden City. On July 12 had in his possession a quantity of cannabis in Welwyn Garden City. Ordered to pay victim services £22.
Novethi Tutani: 40, of Barrington Mews, Welwyn Garden City. Drove a Ford Fiesta at Barrington Mews, Welwyn Garden City whilst over the drink drive limit. Tutani had 59 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath. Fined £96 plus victim services £34. Driving record endorsed with 10 points.
Joshua Muchato: 58, of Bishops Rise, Hatfield. Failed to provide a breath test when suspected of having driven a vehicle on December 20 at St Albans. Ordered to pay victim services £128 and court costs £85. Committed to prison for 4 months suspended for 24 months
This live event features the salmon defender in conversation with coastal Indigenous leaders about our wild fish.
Premier John Horgan acknowledged the opposition to the project in a news conference. “I know there are a lot of British Columbians who have never accepted this is an appropriate way for BC Hydro to go,” he said.
His government inherited a project it never would have started and has done its best to deal with circumstances as they’ve presented
themselves, he said.
The 2017 decision to continue building Site C was difficult, but the decision announced today was easier, Horgan said. The dam is half
iPolitics By iPolitics. Published on Feb 19, 2021 12:01pm (Pexel photo)
The Lead
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) launched a report outlining three environmental emergencies currently facing humanity – the climate crisis, the devastation of wildlife and nature, and the pollution that causes millions of deaths every year.
“Humanity is waging war on nature. This is senseless and suicidal,” said UN Secretary–General Antonio Guterres. “The consequences of our recklessness are already apparent in human suffering, towering economic losses, and the accelerating erosion of life on Earth.”
The report, entitled “Making Peace With Nature,” provides a scientific blueprint on how to repair the planet. One of UNEP’s recommendations encourages redirecting more than $5 trillion from fossil fuels and industrial agriculture to renewable energy and low-carbon technology. It also urges wealthier nations to reduce meat consumption and waste less energy a
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Key details about the future of Site C, the province’s largest public infrastructure project and one that grows more contentious by the day, remain hidden from the public according to experts speaking at a town hall Thursday night organized by the B.C. Green party.
Harry Swain, former chair of the Joint Review Panel on Site C and Roland Willson, chief of the West Moberly First Nation, say the NDP government must lift the secrecy around the mega-dam as its $10.7-billion price tag keeps ballooning.
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