Auteur Sujet: uvoh Snowmobiling deaths up in Ontario: police  (Lu 32 fois)

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uvoh Snowmobiling deaths up in Ontario: police
« le: Octobre 30, 2024, 10:04:25 pm »
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 A terrified teenager surreptitiously texted her mom for help as a Lyft ridesharing driver allegedly turned off his tracking system, groped her and sped down the highway refusing to take her home.I ;m scared, the 18-year-old from Hamilton texted to her mom, who immediately phon stanley bottles ed 911.With the involvement of four police services, the use of cellphone pinging, the wits of the teen and the sharp eye of a police officer, the Lyft car was stopped and the driver handcuffed.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Halton Regiona stanley water bottle l Police have charged Majid Kayali, 63, of Oakville with sexual assault.An emailed statement from Lyft communications officer Scott Coriell says: We have zero tolerance for the behaviour described here. As soon as we were made aware of these allegations, we immediately deactivated the driver. Our concern  termo stanley is with the passenger, and we have been in touch to offer our assistance. We have also been in contact with law enforcement and stand ready to assist in any way we can.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 The ordeal began just before noon on May 6 when the teen 鈥?whose identity is protected by a publication ban 鈥?used an app to request a Lyft to pick her and her boyfriend up at his home in Burlington. She uses Lyft, she says, because it is cheaper than Uber.The Lyft app informed her she would be picked up by a driver named Majid and it s Nxsc Case of Ontario doc facing murder charge put over
 TORONTO 鈥?Whe stanley termoska n employees at boot manufacturer Royer headed back to work last week, their days started with a temperature check as they filed in to the Quebec-based company   facilities while remaining at least six feet apart.They were a stanley becher sked whether they had a runny nose, cough, cold or trouble breathing. Reminders to wash their hands regularly were handed out along with face masks and visors before anyone made it to a work station. At lunch time, workers noticed microwaves had been removed to keep them from spreading germs.The first day was complicated, with patience needed for everybody, said Claude O ;Reilly, Royer   executive manager of Canadian operations. Then after that 鈥?it   been two weeks now 鈥?there   no complaints, no questions, no nothing.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Royer was among the first wave of businesses that reopened in the midst of COVID-19, helping create a blueprint for the scores of companies that will soon follow suit in Quebec, Saskatchewan and Prince Edward Island.Those provinces are the first to attempt a gradual return to work 鈥?a time-consuming and sometimes costly process that will come with plenty of changes to facilities, policies and interactions on the job.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 Before they returned to work, vaso stanley  O ;Reilly said Royer pored over government and public health guidance and liaised wit