His driving licence was endorsed with six points.
LEWIS ANTHONY WILLIAMS, 22, of Mining School Close, Crumlin, was banned from driving for six months after he admitted driving without insurance. He was ordered to pay £419 in a fine, costs and a surcharge.
GEORGE SAMUEL PRICE, 21, of Bronawelon Terrace, Crumlin, was ordered to pay £282 in a fine, costs and a surcharge for driving without insurance. His driving licence was endorsed with six points.
TYLER PRESCOTT WILLIAMS, 27, of Clos Claerwen, Blackwood, was ordered to pay £574 in a fine, costs and a surcharge for speeding at 43mph in a 30mph zone at the Coldra in Newport.
Jackson planners approve Phase II of Adventure Crossing project
Jackson planners approve Phase II of Adventure Crossing project
JACKSON – The Jackson Planning Board has granted amended site plan approval for Phase II of Cardinale Enterprises’ Jackson Crossing 2/Adventure Crossing project.
The approval came during a meeting on March 8. The board members were present in the Jackson municipal building with several of the applicant’s professional representatives.
Other professional representatives of the applicant were at remote locations from where they were able to participate in the meeting.
The meeting was live-streamed and members of the public were able to view the proceedings and offer comments on the application.
The Belford Seafood Co-op on Port Monmouth Road. (Google Earth)
BELFORD, NJ A massive brush fire broke out shortly after 12 p.m. Tuesday near the Belford Seafood Co-op and Belford Harbor marina, said Middletown fire spokesman Dennis Fowler.
Witnesses say the fire was up to 300 feet in length, and they watched in horror as boats, lobster pots and even entire trailers sitting in the marsh were consumed and destroyed by flames within seconds.
In total, two trailers, several boats and an estimated 200 lobster pots were destroyed by the fire, said Fowler. Two Middletown volunteer firefighters were injured fighting the blaze, one from heat exhaustion.
Campaigners pictured in Monmouth Road where the 57 flats are proposed. (Picture taken before the Covid pandemic) A planning inspector will decide whether to override a council s decision to refuse plans for a block of flats in a residential street. It comes after the applicants behind a scheme for 57 flats in Monmouth Road in Watford town centre submitted an appeal to the planning inspectorate. The Planning Inspectorate is a government agency that developers can appeal to for a final decision if a planning application through the local authority has proved unsuccessful. Last May, Watford Borough Council turned down Santok Homes application to demolish five homes and a vicarage and replace it with a part three, five, and seven-storey block of flats to the delight of residents who had fought the scheme.
Campaigners pictured in Monmouth Road where the 57 flats are proposed. (Picture taken before the Covid pandemic) A planning inspector will decide whether to override a council s decision to refuse plans for a block of flats in a residential street. It comes after the applicants behind a scheme for 57 flats in Monmouth Road in Watford town centre submitted an appeal to the planning inspectorate. The Planning Inspectorate is a government agency that developers can appeal to for a final decision if a planning application through the local authority has proved unsuccessful. Last May, Watford Borough Council turned down Santok Homes application to demolish five homes and a vicarage and replace it with a part three, five, and seven-storey block of flats to the delight of residents who had fought the scheme.