Coronavirus outbreak

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The Court Service thinks jury trials can proceed safely, but a cautious juror might not.

This pic of a jury box is fairly typical.

Slightly more elbow room than on a train, but all the seats would be occupied so there's no chance of finding extra space.

A juror would also be expected to sit in his seat for a couple of hours at a time.

Would you be happy being a juror in the current climate?

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I would not. I would feel it was like a sentence in itself, if I was compelled to I think I would prefer to be penalised. On the end on the back row with arms folded at all times looks like the least worst seat.
 

Ming the Merciless

There is no mercy
Location
Inside my skull
Small company, need to work from home, don’t have the infrastructure to cope? Cloudflare have made this option free to small businesses till 1st September.

https://blog.cloudflare.com/cloudfl...mall-businesses-during-coronavirus-emergency/
 

glasgowcyclist

Charming but somewhat feckless
Location
Scotland
Basically cereal or porridge for breakfast, sandwich or cold pasta for lunch and a ready meal for tea. Don't see the point of buying loads of different ingredients when I'm just on my own.

May I recommend a cookery book from the Goddess of The Kitchen, Delia Smith?

It’s a simple book with easy recipes designed for single people and every one is excellent. As usual, Delia’s recipes just work, there’s never any doubt so long as you do what’s written. But the great thing about it is that all of the recipes are scaleable; if you have someone coming for dinner you simply multiply the ingredients by the number of people coming. Recipes are also designed so that if, say, one recipe calls for half a lemon, there will be another recipe that needs to use the other half. You should have zero waste using this book.

The dishes look and taste amazing but are so simple to make that even I couldn’t fudge it up.

Take a look on Amazon where you can get a good quality 2nd hand copy (it’s from 1987) for under £3 delivered. It’s called One is Fun, see Amazon product ASIN 0340389591View: https://www.amazon.co.uk/One-Coronet-Books-Delia-Smith/dp/0340389591
 

Pale Rider

Legendary Member
Absolutely, I suppose the question is whether we get to the point where they say we can not expect you to take any risk. What are the penalties for juror no shows?

Variable, depending on enforcement will and capability.

The letter asking you to attend is a court summons, so ultimately you could be imprisoned for failing to comply with it.

I've seen reluctant jurors arrested, kept in custody usually only for a few hours, then put before the judge for a public ticking off.

The judge usually regards that process as a sufficient penalty.

I would not. I would feel it was like a sentence in itself, if I was compelled to I think I would prefer to be penalised. On the end on the back row with arms folded at all times looks like the least worst seat.

Leaving aside the virus, I wouldn't be keen on doing it.

A long trial in particular would feel like a sentence.

Having said that, the thought of being locked up would make me choose serving as the least worst option.
 

flake99please

We all scream for ice cream
Location
Edinburgh
400 units of 48 pack toilet rolls handed to customers in the first 10 minutes of trading at Costco this morning (limited to 1 per customer). People arriving 2 hours before store opening time. The problem seems to be getting worse.
 
Next doors garden at night? Then wipe on their bush?
I did that, but she wasn't to pleased.
 

marinyork

Resting in suspended Animation
Location
Logopolis
Not suggesting you but there will be many people who are just not interested in any positives at the moment unless it immediately affects their own situation positively - hence the doom focussed media/social media comments.

There are positives from Italy.

1) If you're in a small less infected area that's a less densely populated area and have mass testing you can get the rate of infection down to virtually zero. Well duh says a lot of people.

2) If you're in a province of Italy that has fewer cases lockdown 3 + set of measures no.5 is apparently reducing the number of new cases and the deaths in provinces aren't too bad (it's a bit too early to start jumping up and down).

I'll post in another message, but that's the good news from Italy, the bad news more than outweighs it.
 

tom73

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
Sainsburys are also introducing priority delivery for the elderly and vulnerable too, this is the message;

Email from Sainsburys CEO Mike Coupe:
I wrote to you last week to tell you about some of the steps we are taking to support increased demand for food and other essential items.
After I wrote to you last week, many of you replied. You wrote to share your concerns about our elderly and vulnerable customers and to ask if we can do more to restrict the number of items each person can buy. I have listened to feedback from you and from Sainsbury's colleagues across the country and wanted to share some of the extra steps we are taking to make sure everyone has access to the items that they need:
A number of you suggested that we reserve an hour in stores for elderly and vulnerable customers. In response to this request, we will set aside the first hour in every supermarket this Thursday 19th March, for elderly and vulnerable customers. I hope that you can respect this decision and will work with us as we try our best to help those that need it the most. If you or an elderly family member, friend or neighbour would like to shop during this hour, please check online for your local supermarket opening hours.
We will also help elderly and vulnerable customers access food online. From Monday 23rd March, our online customers who are over 70 years of age or have a disability will have priority access to online delivery slots. We will contact these customers in the coming days with more details.
For any online customer who can travel to our stores, from Monday 23rd March, we will operate an expanded 'click and collect' service. We are significantly increasing the number of collection sites across the country over the coming days in preparation for this. Customers can place their order online as usual and pick it up from a collection point in the store car park. We believe this will also work for people who are self-isolating.
As we work to feed the nation, we are also focusing all of our efforts on getting as much food and other essential items from our suppliers, into our warehouses and onto shelves as we possibly can. We still have enough food for everyone - if we all just buy what we need for us and our families.
To help us get more essential items onto the shelves, from this Thursday 19th March, we will be closing our cafes and our meat, fish and pizza counters in supermarkets. This means we can free up warehouse and lorry capacity for products that customers really need. It will also free up time for our store colleagues to focus on keeping the shelves as well stocked as possible.
I mentioned last week that we had put limits on a very small number of products. Following feedback from our customers and from our store colleagues, we have decided to put restrictions on a larger number of products. From tomorrow, Wednesday 18th March, customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk. We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers.
Finally, I wanted to end by saying a huge thank you to Sainsbury's colleagues across the business. Everyone is working flat out in difficult circumstances to do their best to serve our customers. If you're able to say thank you to them when you see them, I know they would hugely appreciate it.
Best wishes
Mike



Please note I haven't confirmed it but I think it's genuine.

I don't have an issue with them or others going this stuff but the issue is who is going to police it ? What do they define elderly, vulnerable and disabled ? Are they going to get really hard line about it and your going to have prove it? Or is it going to be so adhoc that it will get a bit silly.
 

marinyork

Resting in suspended Animation
Location
Logopolis
I don't have an issue with them or others going this stuff but the issue is who is going to police it ? What do they define elderly, vulnerable and disabled ? Are they going to get really hard line about it and your going to have prove it? Or is it going to be so adhoc that it will get a bit silly.

Knowing Sainsbury's it'll be interpreted in the widest possible sense and ad hoc. Depending on the demographics of the store this'll work more or less all right in some areas and be some problems in others.

I agree with the sentiments of others about defining individual groups (or the idea that older age groups of shoppers can't be aggressive is misguided), but it's better than what went before.

I think the company might be surprised of the reaction to the on-line offer. There are some very real safety issues around delivery too that I reckon head office won't have considered as they tend to think home delivery goes by procedure.

It's soap and paracetamol I'm worried about. Not been able to get hold of any soap for a two weeks and that's what many others have told me when discussions have gone beyond bog roll, soup, chicken and so on.
 
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