Showing posts with label impaired driving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label impaired driving. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

News roundup, 5 May 2026

- The US military is making moves to open the Strait of Hormuz to their vessels by force. This is going about as well as you might expect. Iran claims to have hit a US frigate; the US denies this. The UAE intercepted several missiles that it says were launched at it by Iran. While they did not reach their targets, a drone was able to set fire to an oil facility in the emirate of Fujairah. Trump is responding to all this in his trademark style, naturally; he's also proposing to use his navy to escort ships through the strait (people who actually know anything about warfare are skeptical, of course). I guess the one good thing is that at least this is happening in the spring, though there's no guarantee that this will be over by the fall when the need for natural gas for heating is going to spike.

- Another building owned by the nonprofit Winnipeg Housing Rehabilitation Corporation is getting attention for all the wrong reasons after the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority has deemed the building too dangerous for their home care staff to visit. Residents have to go to the nearby Indigenous Family Centre in order to meet with staff; this is obviously suboptimal since people who need home care are generally, well, housebound.

- The Manitoba government has proposed changes to drinking water safety legislation that have sent a lot of rural folks into a tizzy. Among the changes - it clearly specifies that property owners are responsible for the safety of wells on their property. Usually rural types like to natter about "personal responsibility", especially when someone talks about things like systemic causes of crime, but evidently they don't like it when it's applied to them. The legislation also allows medical officers to order chlorination for any well that serves more than one residence - something that worries many Hutterite colonies.

- A Toronto prosecutor was caught apparently berating a police officer who was a witness for the defense in the case of a man accused of deliberately ramming another officer with a motorcycle. There was no sound on the video, but witnesses say that she was swearing at him and, in response to him saying "What am I supposed to do, lie?" she allegedly said "We protect our own!" The judge has tossed the case; folks in this Reddit thread say that the prosecutor in question is married to a cop.

- New legislation being introduced by the Kinew government in Manitoba will require anyone who causes death or bodily harm by impaired driving, in the event that they get their license back, to have a zero blood alcohol content while driving. The government has previously added a provision that anyone convicted a of impaired driving a second time within a ten year period will be permanently banned from driving. 

- A 41 year old man in Portage La Prairie, Manitoba has been arrested after filming himself kicking a 71 year old stranger. The motive is not clear, but I'd hazard a guess that it's a modern version of "happy slapping", a rather unpleasant activity that became trendy in the UK in the mid-noughties.

Friday, December 20, 2024

News roundup, 20 Dec 2024

- Donald Trump is suing media outlets who report negative stories about him. Among the defendants are a newspaper that published a negative poll about him (he's suing the pollster too, of course), as well as the Pulitzer Prize foundation for giving awards to newspapers that reported on his ties to Russia.

- Justin Trudeau is reportedly preparing to announce a major cabinet shuffle today, in an attempt to fill the holes left by recent resignations; meanwhile more MPs keep coming out of the woodwork and calling for him to step down. For his part, Jagmeet Singh is unwilling to commit to bringing down the government in a confidence vote, but he isn't saying he won't either; he says it depends on the specific situation at the time of the vote. This is an eminently reasonable position, but unfortunately it probably won't endear him to a public who, especially in these times, tend to view caution as dithering.

- As has been predicted for some time, insurance companies are starting to cancel policies in areas facing serious climate-related risks. Nearly 2 million policies have been cancelled since 2018 for such reasons.

- Joe Biden has directed the Environmental Protection Agency to give California a waiver to enable the state to ban the sales of new fossil fuel-powered cars and light trucks by 2035. Eleven other states are also on board; the hope is that this will delay Trump's efforts to reverse course on EVs long enough for the automakers to shift their production to a degree that they won't want to undo.

- Montana's supreme court has upheld a ruling by a lower court that issuing permits for fossil fuel extraction without regard for climate change is a violation of the right to a clean environment that is written into the state's constitution.

- Residents of a Winnipeg apartment block who were evacuated last spring after structural issues were found in the building have been allowed to return home, though some lack confidence in the safety of the building and are declining the offer.

- A Winnipeg police officer who crashed his motorcycle last year was acquitted of impaired driving because the folks who took the blood samples used as evidence somehow "forgot" to label them with the date.

- Police in the Spanish town of Soria got a break in a missing person case when they found a Google Street View image of someone stuffing a corpse-sized object into the trunk of a car. Further investigation led to the discovery of remains believed to be the victim and the arrest of the deceased's ex and her new boyfriend.

Friday, December 6, 2024

News roundup, 6 Dec 2024

- Police continue to search for the suspect in the shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Many people definitely understand the anger towards such companies, even if they wouldn't advocate such a drastic solution to the problem.

- A storm bearing down on the UK may subject parts of Wales and southwestern England to hurricane-force winds, and may be potentially damaging as far away as Scotland and Northern Ireland.

- Joe Biden is considering preemptive pardons for some critics of Donald Trump, in the hope of shielding them from the revenge that Trump has vowed to take against them. Potential recipients including former Chief Medical Advisor Dr Anthony Fauci as well as Democrats involved in the impeachment proceedings against Trump. California representative turned Senator-elect Adam Schiff, who has been cited as a possible recipient, questions the need for this, saying that he is confident that the courts are robust enough to deal with Trump and throw out spurious cases, but I'm not sure I share his confidence given Trump's stacking of federal courts during his first term. Maybe Schiff is afraid to admit just how broken his country's democracy is.

- Winnipeg appears poised to announce the largest property tax hike since 1990, according to unnamed sources who say a preliminary draft of the budget includes a 5.95% increase. This is probably necessary but will come as a shock to some.

- A bill before the Manitoba legislature will amend the Highway Traffic Act to allow for lifetime suspensions to be given to drivers convicted of impaired driving causing death or bodily harm for a second time within a 10 year period (currently the maximum suspension is 10 years). The bill would also require that anyone whose license is reinstated after their first conviction for such offenses have a zero BAC for driving for a seven year period.

- A plea deal in which Boeing agreed to plead guilty to a single count of criminal fraud related to what it failed to tell regulators about the MCAS system used on the Boeing 737 Max which killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019 has been rejected by a judge, who said that the deal gave the court too little power to monitor Boeing's compliance with its side of the deal.

- The Grand Chief of the Southern Chiefs Association was beaten up in front of a bar in Ottawa ahead of an Assembly of First Nations conference. Someone in this Reddit thread alleges that the assailants were councillors from Lake Manitoba First Nation but this is unconfirmed.

- Hongchi Xiao, an "alternative healer" who practiced "slap therapy" has been convicted of manslaughter in the UK after a 71 year old client with Type 1 diabetes to stop taking her insulin in favour of his treatments, with fatal results. This is actually his second conviction for this; he was convicted by an Australian court in the death of a six year old boy whose parents stopped giving him insulin on Xiao's advice.