Soltalk December 2017 | Page 29

offence. Islington Council have withdrawn the fine and apologised, promising to recycle their recycling policy. Meanwhile, police in Leicestershire had to ask Oadby council to end their trial project which switched off street lights after midnight. Since the cash-saving measure was introduced, burglars are reported to have raided 27 homes in the darkened streets in the space of one month. However, while the council has switched the street lights back on overnight until January when a review will be undertaken, councillors deny the spike in break-ins was related to the policy. Highways councillor Blake Pain said they had worked closely with the police throughout the “part-night project.” At Haye in Cornwall, the local council have recently painted new double yellow lines on a quiet residential street after a new patch of tarmac was laid following work on a gas main. The lines are two feet (60 centimetres) long. The road previously was painted with double yellows but they have completely faded away, but, following orders, a council worker (only doing his job, guv) turned up to replace one tiny section of them. Coventry, too, has been baffled by the appearance of two sets of double yellow lines along each side of a paved alley which is just over six feet (1.2 metres) wide. Even if a driver could get a car into that space, the doors couldn’t be opened to get out. Coventry City co uncil say the road is private and deny having painted the lines. Boys in Blue and Yellow During last month, officers from Detroit’s 12th Police Precinct decided to stage a raid on the city’s Andover district, which is a notoriously drug-heavy area, by posing undercover as dealers with the intention of nicking any buyers who approached them. And the ploy worked. Buyers quickly turned up and started talking to them ... before drawing their weapons and ordering the officers to the ground. The buyers were actually undercover cops from the 11th Precinct who were trying to nick dealers. The rest of the 12th Precinct Special Operations team then arrived and began raiding a suspected drug dealer’s house, but instead of helping them catch a suspect, a fight ensured between the “dealers” and the “buyers”. The Detroit Police Department has opened an internal investigation. 27 When Conrad Bennett’s car broke down in Guildford last month, he pulled into a nearby council car park to find out why smoke was issuing from the engine. Enter a trusty employee of Waverley Borough Council to investigate. When Mr Bennett explained he had a problem with his Reliant Robin, the council worker, instead of offering help, slapped a £50 fine on the vehicle and wandered off merrily wishing Mr Bennett a “Happy Christmas!” Mr Bennett was understandably miffed but the Council upheld their employee’s decision and has told him to challenge the fine if he feels ill done by. Mr Bennett’s comments on the warden’s attitude are not printable. Only in ... ... Alabama where a jury has decided that the Army veteran who broke his hip while picking out a watermelon at a Walmart store should receive $7.5 million. Henry Walker went shopping there in June 2015 and as he reached for the watermelon, his foot got stuck in the side of a wooden pallet under the display. He fell and shattered his hip, then sued Walmart for negligence and Continued overleaf