Electric scooters are an increasingly common sight on the streets, with some selling online for as little as £20.
Parish councillor David Belsten said: “The idea was to give short, medium and long term solutions, but I heard very little in the way of solutions.“There was a lot of ‘we have to do a model on this, we're looking at that’. I was quite disappointed.”
He said the suggestion of a review was “positive” but added: “Here we are after a major flooding event, still hearing the same. I was hoping for a lot more."Mr Adkins said the village had been given a "specific contact" at Anglian Water, which was "a start".He believed although “there’s some action” happening, regular meetings and “a more joined-up approach” was needed between agencies.
“There's got to be a follow up, there’s got to be action, these guys need to work together. I don’t quite see it," he added.On D-Day, 6 June 1944, thousands of American service personnel perished on the beaches of Normandy, and most are buried or remembered at the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial in France.
But some of those who served that day were buried at the Cambridge American Cemetery (CAAC), after later succumbing to their injuries.
In all, the cemetery in Madingley contains the remains of 3,811 of the US war dead and 5,127 names are recorded on the Walls of the Missing.There is no routine testing for men.
The father-of-one said he did not want to do the "blokey thing" and ignore it, so went to the doctors the day after finding the lump.Two weeks later he received scans and a biopsy at Clatterbridge Hospital, in Wirral, where he had it confirmed it was breast cancer.
He said: "There's a bit of a stigma attached to it, with it being breast cancer, but when you hear the c-word it is pretty terrifying."Four weeks after being told, I went back to the hospital on the women's ward to have the mastectomy, which was strange."