Latest news with #Grantham


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Navi Mumbai traffic constable run over by hydra crane
Navi Mumbai: A 43-year-old traffic constable was fatally struck by a hydra crane at Mahape Circle in Navi Mumbai on Thursday, around 12:30 pm. Constable Ganesh Patil, who lived in CBD-Belapur police colony with his family, including his homemaker wife, engineering student son, and young daughter, was crushed under the vehicle's front wheel. He was the younger sibling of a Navi Mumbai journalist, and his father had served as a police sub-inspector. The last rites for constable Ganesh Patil are scheduled to take place in his native Samner village, Pachora taluka in Jalgaon district on Friday. You Can Also Check: Mumbai AQI | Weather in Mumbai | Bank Holidays in Mumbai | Public Holidays in Mumbai DCP (traffic) Tirupati Kakade stated, "It is indeed unfortunate that constable Ganesh Patil met with a fatal accident while on duty due to the alleged negligence of the hydra crane driver, who has been handed over to Turbhe police where an offence will be registered against him." According to Turbhe's senior inspector Abasaheb Patil, the crane operator, Rajesh Kumar Gond (39) from UP, faces charges under Bharatiya Nyay Sanhita (BNS) sections 105 and 281 for culpable homicide not amounting to murder and reckless driving, respectively. Additional charges under Motor Vehicle Act section 184 for dangerous driving were also filed. Due to the non-bailable nature of BNS section 105, Gond will face arrest and court appearance on Friday. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Grantham: If You Were Born Between 1940-1975 You Could Be Eligible For This Life Cover Reassured Undo Inspector Patil elaborated, "The BNS sections have been invoked against the accused Gond after recording the statements of the other on-duty traffic cops present at Mahape Circle, who are eyewitnesses to the fatal incident. They informed that the hydra crane was coming from Rabale MIDC to head towards Turbhe MIDC and hence took the service road under the flyover. As the traffic signal under the flyover at Mahape Circle was non-functional, there was a severe traffic snarl. Hence, traffic cops were deployed at the spot to streamline the vehicular traffic movement when the hydra crane driver knocked down constable Ganesh Patil and ran over his head and abdomen, causing his death on the spot, as he was declared brought dead at NMMC hospital, Vashi. The forensic team has collected samples from the accident spot as evidence for presenting before the court."


Times
20 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Times
Do we have to bear all this semi-nudity? Just cover up!
A young woman has been giving vent to her outrage in Margaret Thatcher's home town of Grantham (of all places). Georgia Toomey was leaving a gym in crotch-grippingly tight shorts, a sports bra with much cleavage and a bare midriff (though, to be fair, no visible navel). Arriving at Wetherspoons she was ordered to 'cover up' with her light zip jacket because it was a 'family-friendly pub'. Cue flesh-rich pictures and her plaint: 'She looked me up and down like a piece of dirt. It makes me feel like I should be covering up, but I shouldn't be.' Yes, you should, so hurrah for Spoons and the spirit of Grantham. The seasonal outbreak of urban beachwear does not beautify our land: find the right media-psychologist and you could probably classify it as a depressant of national 'mental health', provoking either disgust or creepily inappropriate judgment (online, people are already checking out her 'thigh gap'). This plague of public semi-nudity grows year on year. I tried for a while to consider it liberating, a Garden of Eden resistance to imported cover-up cultures which presume that an inch of female face or hair gives men a free pass for lechery. But I keep swerving to the other extreme, wishing extreme skin-shows would stay by beach and pool. Shirtless building workers have an excuse, though not for unlovely trouser slippage at the stern. If office workers of either sex feel comfortable in tidy Bermuda shorts, and women let a bit more thigh and shoulder out, fine. Ideally the old rule works: not both at once. • Feel the burn: Ulrika Jonsson's tan has become a hot topic But it's far beyond that. The close-up acreage of (mainly pink) flesh in every train, bus and crowd is a rude invasion, a scornful up-yours to anyone forced into sweaty proximity. It's not even cooler to expose great slabs of flesh: loose, blowing cotton does the job perfectly. And note, this is not just a youthful or downmarket habit. In a theatre stall the other day I sat behind a lady of boomer years who had opted for a backless spaghetti-strap dress. Fine in a ballroom but why, close up, should anyone pay £120 to stare past wrinkled, mole-dotted old flesh for two long hours? I only just resisted an impulse to write PUT IT AWAY on her well-padded backbone with my critic's rollerball. Human skin is a marvel: durable, nuanced and generally self-repairing. Lovers revel in sharing it, infants are comforted by skin-on-skin. But in a post-modesty culture, why aggravate our national troubles with strangers' epidermal acreage? Elizabethan sumptuary laws are gone, and the 19th-century statute about outraging public decency only gets hauled out for the most blatant sexual displays or extreme political T-shirts. There is no legal redress. So re-dress, everyone. Please!


BBC News
a day ago
- Climate
- BBC News
Lincolnshire flood alerts upgraded by Environment Agency
Improvements have been made to a flood warning service in Lincolnshire, officials have Environment Agency said the changes included expanding the service to reach hundreds more people, along with work to make alerts in Grantham, Boston, Lincoln and Market Rasen more comes after a number of recent flood events across the county, including in January when more than 30 flood warnings were in have been urged to sign up for the service. David Manby, flood resilience team leader at the Environment Agency, said: "We have been working hard to improve the accuracy and the reach of our flood warning service to better protect people."The changes include a new flood warning area covering the South Forty-Foot Drain in Boston, as well as splitting the River Witham flood warning area in Grantham to ensure better accuracy. According to the Environment Agency, data from the January flooding showed that some Grantham residents received flood warnings, despite not being impacted - meaning they were unnecessarily than 800 homes have now been moved to a new "wider" flood warning zone, a spokesperson added. Listen to highlights from Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here. Download the BBC News app from the App Store for iPhone and iPad or Google Play for Android devices


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
I was told to 'cover up' in Wetherspoons - after being told my Gymshark shorts and sports bra weren't 'family friendly'
A woman has revealed her outrage at being told to 'cover up' after she visited her local Wetherspoons pub - in gym wear. Georgia Toomey went to meet her boyfriend at The Tollemache Inn in Grantham, Lincolnshire, after finishing a workout at the gym. However, the 23-year-old says she was 'looked up and down' by a female staff member and told to zip up her top to conceal her blue sports bra because it was 'a family friendly pub.' The cleaner said she and her partner then went to the beer garden planning to order from the app - but left after they claim the same worker kept coming outside to look at them. Georgia, who was wearing Gymshark cycling shorts and a matching sports bra, which cost £38 each, said: 'We walked in and I was wearing a gym set, I thought, ''we're only going to Spoons, I don't have to change''. 'But this woman looked me up and down and said I had to zip my top up. She said it was a family-friendly pub. 'I think it's ridiculous. It's only sports wear and you shouldn't feel like you can't wear it. 'I can wear it in the gym, so why can't I wear it in Wetherspoons? She just wanted me to do it up - which I think is stupid. 'If it was somewhere in London, I would get it - but it's not, it's Spoons in Grantham. 'You should be able to wear what you want and shouldn't be sexualised in gym wear. 'I would get it if it was a lacey bra or something, but it's not. She looked me up and down like a piece of dirt. It makes me feel like I should be covering up, but I shouldn't be. 'It's not like I'm big-chested, either - I was showing a bit of cleavage, but that's it. I'm sure girls have worn much more revealing stuff in there. She added: 'It's other people's problem if they are getting affected by a bit of cleavage.' After being told to cover up, Georgia says she and her boyfriend went out to the beer garden, where nobody else was sitting. However, they evetually opted to leave the pub after growing frustrated when, they say, the staff member kept coming out to 'check she was covered up.' Georgia complained to the pub but says they 'lied' by telling her she had been 'refused service and asked to leave', which she claims did not happen. She added: 'We were sat outside and were going to order on the app, but the woman from the bar, who was about 40 or 50, kept coming outside and looking. 'It made me feel really embarrassed and insecure. We didn't feel comfortable, so we left. But the woman wrote and said she threw us out and wasn't going to serve us, which never happened. 'When I looked online it said you're allowed sports wear.' Georgia took to social media to share her experience and said a man replied saying he and his friends had been in the same pub topless with no issues before. In an email reply to her, the pub chain said: 'Most of our pubs are family environments, so we ask our customers to dress appropriately and in a way which would not cause offence. 'All customers must be fully clothed throughout their visit. The company does not permit the removal of shirts or footwear. 'In addition, some pubs operate specific dress codes at all or certain times. 'I appreciate that you were not satisfied by the way in which the incident was handled. 'Having discussed your feedback with the pub's manager, I understand that you were refused service and were asked to leave.' However in a statement, the pub backtracked and agreed that Georgia had not been asked to leave and she was 'very welcome to return'. Wetherspoon spokesman Eddie Gershon said: 'It's always a matter of fine judgement for pub managers where sportswear is concerned. 'In this case, the customer was asked if she would mind zipping up her gym top, to which she kindly agreed.


The Sun
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- The Sun
I'm mad after being told to ‘cover up' in the pub garden at Spoons – I was showing cleavage but it's only a sports bra
A YOUNG woman was left outraged after being told to cover up at her local Wetherspoons pub - because she was wearing a sports bra. Georgia Toomey went to meet her boyfriend at The Tollemache Inn in Grantham, Lincs., after finishing a workout at the gym. 3 3 3 But the 23-year-old says she was "looked up and down" by a female staff member and told to zip up her top to conceal her gym wear because it was "a family friendly pub.". The cleaner said she and her boyfriend went to the beer garden planning to order from the app - but left after the same worker kept coming outside to look at them. Georgia, of Grantham, said: "We walked in and I was wearing a gym set, I thought, 'we're only going to Spoons, I don't have to change'. "But this woman looked me up and down and said I had to zip my top up. She said it was a family-friendly pub. "I think it's ridiculous. It's only sports wear and you shouldn't feel like you can't wear it. "I can wear it in the gym, so why can't I wear it in Wetherspoons? "She just wanted me to do it up - which I think is stupid. "If it was somewhere in London, I would get it - but it's not, it's Spoons in Grantham. "You should be able to wear what you want and shouldn't be sexualised in gym wear. "I would get it if it was a lacey bra or something, but it's not. Brooks Nadar suffers embarrassing wardrobe malfunction accidentally baring all in plunging silk dress on ESPY red carpet "She looked me up and down like a piece of dirt. "It makes me feel like I should be covering up, but I shouldn't be. "It's not like I'm big-chested, either - I was showing a bit of cleavage, but that's it. "I'm sure girls have worn much more revealing stuff in there. "It's other people's problem if they are getting affected by a bit of cleavage." After being told to cover up, Georgia says she and her boyfriend went out to the beer garden, where nobody else was sitting. Can you be dress coded for wearing crop tops in public? The concept of being "dress coded" typically applies to specific environments such as schools, workplaces, or certain establishments where dress codes are enforced to maintain a particular standard or atmosphere. In public spaces, however, the situation is generally more relaxed and governed by societal norms rather than strict rules. That said, whether or not you can be dress coded for wearing a crop top in public largely depends on the context and location: Public Spaces: In most public spaces, like parks, streets, and beaches, wearing a crop top is generally acceptable and unlikely to result in any formal repercussions. People have the freedom to dress as they choose, provided they adhere to basic standards of decency and local laws. Establishments and Venues: Some restaurants, shops, or clubs may have their own dress codes. It's possible that a crop top might not meet the dress requirements for more formal venues. In such cases, staff may politely request that you adhere to their dress code or deny entry. Schools and Workplaces: Educational institutions and workplaces often have dress codes in place. Crop tops may be considered inappropriate in these settings, and you could be asked to change into more suitable attire. Cultural and Regional Considerations: In certain cultures or regions, norms and expectations around acceptable clothing can vary widely. It's always a good idea to be aware of and respect local customs and dress codes when travelling. But they opted to leave the pub after growing frustrated when the staff member kept coming out to "check she was covered up." Georgia complained to the pub but says they 'lied' by telling her she had been 'refused service and asked to leave', which she claims did not happen. Georgia, who had been wearing Gymshark shorts and sports bra, which cost £38 each, added: "We were sat outside and were going to order on the app, but the woman from the bar, who was about 40 or 50, kept coming outside and looking. "It made me feel really embarrassed and insecure. "We didn't feel comfortable, so we left. But the woman wrote and said she threw us out and wasn't going to serve us, which never happened. "When I looked online it said you're allowed sports wear." Georgia took to social media to share her experience and said a man replied saying he and his friends had been in the same pub topless with no issues before. In an email reply to her, the pub chain said: "Most of our pubs are family environments, so we ask our customers to dress appropriately and in a way which would not cause offence. "All customers must be fully clothed throughout their visit. "The company does not permit the removal of shirts or footwear. "In addition, some pubs operate specific dress codes at all or certain times. "I appreciate that you were not satisfied by the way in which the incident was handled. "Having discussed your feedback with the pub's manager, I understand that you were refused service and were asked to leave." However in a statement, the pub backtracked and agreed that Georgia had not been asked to leave and she was 'very welcome to return'. Wetherspoon spokesman Eddie Gershon said: "It's always a matter of fine judgement for pub managers where sportswear is concerned. 'In this case, the customer was asked if she would mind zipping up her gym top, to which she kindly agreed. 'She was not asked to leave and is very welcome to return to the pub in the future.'