Covid-19 fines as police raid Turkish Hairline barbers in Coalville
The business should have remained shut until April 12
Updated
Police raided Turkish Hairlines (Image: Getty)
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A barber has been fined for breaching Covid-regulations along with customers caught getting an illegal haircut.
Police and council officials went to Turkish Hairlines in Coalville on Saturday and found four customers in there for a trim.
The Wyoming Legislature has been abuzz this week with a number of high-profile bills â and topics â filtering through the House and Senate. Some would directly impact Teton County, and others have animated conversation around Medicaid expansion, abortion rights, taxes, power generation and voting.
Weâve rounded up a few of the bills here.
House Bill 164, co-sponsored by Teton County Rep. Andy Schwartz and Sen. Mike Gierau, passed the committee on Monday in a 5-2 vote.
The legislation authorizes Wyoming to sell a square-mile Grand Teton National Park inholding to the National Park Service, though itâs saddled with a potential poison pill of an amendment that requires any sale must fetch $500,000 an acre.
4 Min Read
LONDON (Reuters) - Talk of a commodities “super cycle” and gains in prices from iron to copper have brightened the outlook for resource-linked currencies, but the tide hasn’t lifted all boats, with emerging market currencies struggling to keep up with developed peers.
FILE PHOTO: Brazilian Real and U.S. dollar notes are pictured at a currency exchange office in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in this September 10, 2015 photo illustration. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes
Emerging currencies have been at the sharp end of a recent rise in U.S. Treasury yields, which sparked a shakeout across global markets.
Below are four charts showing the connection between commodities and currencies and how current moves compare to previous episodes.
Russia’s Push to Replace Aussie Coal in China an Empty Threat
Russia is planning to exploit trade tensions between Australia and China to move large quantities of its low-quality coal into the Chinese market and the rest of Asia.
Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin met with industry executives and government officials to discuss plans for drastically increasing coal export to Asia by up to 30 percent, according to a Wood Mackenzie report obtained by The Australian. Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with employees of the Ural Transport Machine-Building Design Bureau during a visit to the Ural Vagon Zavod factory in Nizhny Tagil in the Ural mountains, Russia, on Nov. 25, 2015. (Alexei Nikolsky/Sputnik via AP)
Labor heavyweight Chris Bowen trip to Australia’s coal heartland on Thursday will be the first by a senior frontbencher to a Queensland coal mine since the 2019 election.