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4039 comments
Not really - it's an argument for paying care workers properly so that they can afford it.
Aren't we essentially in Red Diesel territory here? It's not that it's immune from the issues Pub bike raises, such as fraud, but it's not like a whole new system would need to be instituted.
tbh I doubt she is really, I suspect theyre using it abit like the Tories did pre budgets, float an idea in the press, gauge the reaction, likely to be bad, waffle on about the hard choices, such that when the budget actually comes the thing theyre really going to tax then doesnt seem so bad, and youll be left with a well the choice was this or tax fuel more, we're choosing the best for the hard workers of the country, blah blah blah, etc.
Unfortunately, most of the particulate pollution ends up getting washed off into our waterways and certainly the tyre particulates are terrible for the health of marine life. However, there seems to be a national policy to keep polluting our waterways with the regulator being utterly toothless (e.g. if a pollution spill is reported late by a water company, then the regulator cannot measure the scale of it and won't penalise the company for it).
I'll bet the sergeant had a difficult childhood.
Notable that one of the big objections was that the pedestrian crossing would inconvenience drivers, and lead to them (through no fault of their own) experiencing road rage.
The objections to that proposal are weird.
The NT are proposing an uncontrolled pedestrian crossing over a B Road, and they are all claiming it will be dangerous and clog up the traffic and damage the business of the ferry - where that road traffic goes.
The capacity of the ferry is 28 vehicles max, and it goes about twice an hour in each direction.
So the flow is maxed out at about 2 cars per minute.
They are whining about 4 minute delays for motor vehicles casued by the pedestrian crossing and how pedestrians will "make it dangerous", yet the ferry only goes every 20-30 minutes, and they charge cycles disproportionately high fares. They are also objectinkg to a bit of traffic calming, and a slightly longer 30mph limit on a narrow road.
TBF the proposdal is also strange, given that the NT is working on increasing active travel.
Killer driver walks free. - chalk another one up
One for wtjs !
Sadly, many people think LancsFilth are embarrassed by 'this sort of thing'. They're not. They have survived many years of a policy of completely ignoring road traffic offences, they survived the Nicola Bulley debacle, etc. and they have (or, possibly, had) a compliant and useless PCC and very low expectations from a public which is also anti-cyclist.
Pretty poor attempt at "during a funeral" in one of the linked stories.
To me that sounds like the following driver caused the crash by not concentrating on what the car ahead was doing. There can be any number of reasons why a car needs to suddenly slow/stop and although photographing a sign shouldn't be one, it doesn't mean that following drivers just carry on regardless.
(Not trying to excuse the Uncle as he had the children in the back seat not wearing seat belts and had a suspended/revoked license)
it's way off-topic, but the police for several days seemed to lose the narrative to mr self-appointed underwater search specialist.
mr specialist 'my guys have searched the river 3 miles downstream: she is not there'
dog Walker <finds the body in some reeds a week later a mile downstream>
I am admiring the superbly unnecessary precision of
though.
There are a lot of people out there who seem to think exactly that. It's like all those times that the traffic lights change as you are halfway across a crossing, and the oncoming motorists seem to be of the opinion that if you're still in the roadway then you're fair game…
IIRC didn't the same guy try to get involved in the search for that British teenager who disappeared on Tenerife?
Rounded up to 95% that's still 7,500* journeys a day where there's an issue. That's 2.74 m a year, so there's bound to be someone having a funeral.
*Source - sorry about this - one more river crossing will fix it:
https://nationalhighways.co.uk/our-roads/lower-thames-crossing/the-need-...
I see they've found a body near the last location of his phone.
TBF underwater search is incredibly challenging, and IIRC part of this river was tidal. Things can get moved around at random times.
Having said that, while this dude was presumably motivated by trying to help he didn't seem shy of airtime. There also seemed to be an extraordinary number of people inserting themselves into the story. And ultimately the initial police theory turned out to be correct (seems odd to defendLancs police! ).
Or just asleep at the wheel
Judge Simon Carr gave Coleridge an eight-month custodial sentence, which was suspended for two years. Coleridge was disqualified from driving for 18 months
https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/sleeping-driver-sentence...
Intrepid investigive journalist uses taxi to get to traffic chaos street but somehow forgets local and important mayoral elections close local schools for use as polling stations.
Which is definitely best practice, if you don't mind the motorists behind you honking their horns at you and wanting you to close up the line so that maybe one extra car will get through on a green light
Looks like the loading bay signs went up between 2014 and 2021.
Can't we start designing cars to NOT hit pedestrians?
To be fair, if we were to shove all the cars into museums and only drive them on occasional days out, then there'd be a lot less emissions.
Representing himself at the hearing, Lacey said: "I've really got nothing to say. I misjudged how much I'd drunk.
"I had a couple of glasses of wine with lunch and a few pints of beer," he said.
Given I took this picture Beaulieu House, I wouldn't expect any consistency.
Please can you tell me the way to the secret staircase?
I could, but then I'd have to push you down it.
the correct answer was "no, it's a secret"
If you visit his motor museum it's got a little section celebrating all his family's victories in 'the war on motorists'.
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