It may expose a weakness or may expose an officer to a suspect who may decide to go out in a blaze of glory. |
It's been great just to get out there. I've gotten a chance to play every day, go out there and get some consistent at-bats and just go up there and just try to hit the ball hard and play well. |
It's more than just hot, it's boiling over in some areas. |
It's taking our officers much longer to respond to an accident because they have to fight their way through all of the traffic just to get to the scene, |
My power came on last year, thanks to working with Steve. You always have to be a threat to drive the ball. I've always had that hitting-for-average label. To have the extra power is a bonus. |
Nobody knows what the long-term population is, what the effects on the city will be. I hope by the end of the year we'll have a much better idea. |
Now we average 90 accidents a day and often it's as high as 100, |
Sometimes it's going to be the pitching that picks us up, and sometimes we're going to pick the pitching up, ... It was a barn-burner and we did a good job of capitalizing on the chances that we had. |
That's right. You just want to go out there, get good at bats and prove you can play. |
The same thing goes for wreckers, ... As a result, it's taking our officers a lot longer to work an accident and a lot longer before they can answer another call. |
The state has access to that data and did not separate it out, ... There is a field (in the database) that lets us know. I'm not sure if it was an accident, a mishap or intentional. |
There's a lot of contention between major corporations and the Ben Franklin entrepreneur inventor, |
There's no question the calls from the public have increased, ... These include calls from the public saying a red light is out or their house has been broken into and things like that. |
They only give users a 'ballpark figure' of what their home is worth rather than a well-researched and unbiased opinion of value. |
They panicked and left, |