Coroner issues warning over death crash junctionpublished at 01:20 British Summer Time 25 June 2020
Jamie Finlay died after the car he was a passenger in hit an oncoming vehicle on 8 May 2017.
Read MoreUpdates for Wednesday, 21 June 2017
The first ever Suffolk Day is here!
Kids in wigs: Students mark Suffolk Day by dressing as Ed Sheeran
More than 6,000 people take part in Bury St Edmunds plan consultation
An Ipswich woman is fined £200 for discarded fag end
Jamie Finlay died after the car he was a passenger in hit an oncoming vehicle on 8 May 2017.
Read MoreThe man, in his 60s, fell from a third-floor balcony in the early hours and died at the scene.
Read MoreA union is to ballot members on industrial action after a transport logistics company announced it was making a number of drivers redundant and was seeking to change their terms and conditions.
Twelve drivers at Goldstar Transport, external in Woolpit, Suffolk face losing their jobs while more than 80 are being offered transfers to another depot at Felixstowe.
Unite, external, which will run a ballot for strike action, said that within days of requesting trade union recognition earlier this month, the management announced to its 107 drivers by email that it was ceasing haulage operations from Woolpit.
But Goldstar Transport managing director Matthew Ashworth said the depot was not closing but would be expanded as a storage facility.
"The market is changing, the industry is changing and we need to adapt and meet that demand," he said.
On changes to terms and conditions, he said Woolpit drivers were being asked to "be more flexible" and work "tramper" shifts, where they sleep overnight in their cabs.
Anglian Water engineers have begun preparations ahead of the installation of Lowestoft's new flood defences, which are expected to start later this year.
Trial holes will be dug in three places so the water company can confirm which water and sewage pipes need to be moved or diverted.
Anglian Water says its work on the vital infrastructure project, external will mean traffic management will be in place at sites on Hamilton Road, Waveney Road and Station Square.
During the December 2013 tidal surge, some 160 homes and businesses in the Suffolk seaside town were flooded.
East Suffolk Council said its new scheme will reduce the risk of 500 homes and businesses being flooded by the sea, rivers or extreme rainfall.
The show at Christchurch Mansion in Ipswich was curated by the flame-haired songsmith's father.
Read MoreA man has died after reports that he fell from a third floor flat near Ipswich waterfront in the early hours of this morning.
Police were called to the building in Duke Street at about 02:35.
Inquiries are continuing and Suffolk Police is appealing for witnesses.
There may be no Wimbledon this year, but those desperate for some tennis can watch or play the game on brand new courts at the Abbey Gardens in Bury St Edmunds.
Two courts will be available from 1 July.
John Griffiths, leader of West Suffolk Council, external, said: "It has long been our ambition to replace the old courts and move them to a more suitable setting within the gardens.
"It is perhaps particularly important at this time, when many of us may have been struggling to get enough exercise, that there are these opportunities to enjoy sport for our physical as well as mental health."
The authority invested £263,000 in the extension of the public gardens into the former Eastgate nursery, which includes the new public tennis courts, with funding help and approval from English Heritage.
Titan Tennis will be offering coaching sessions, external on Saturday mornings, with players asked to ensure they follow social distancing guidelines.
Three men have been arrested in connection with suspected modern slavery offences.
Suffolk Police, external were joined by other UK enforcement agencies and police officers from Romania as they raided an address in the west of Ipswich earlier this month.
The three men, aged 29, 26 and 20, were questioned on suspicion of slavery, servitude and forced or compulsory labour offences.
Paperwork, payment cards and other items were recovered and a number of potential victims located, police said.
The Gangmaster and Labour Abuse Authority's, external senior investigating officer Jenni Baines said: "We know that the current pandemic also has the potential to create the conditions in which more people are exploited for their labour."
The three men have been released on police bail pending further inquiries.
A town centre's food and drink festival that normally attracts 35,000 people over two days has been cancelled because of the coronavirus pandemic.
The Our Bury St Edmunds, external Food & Drink Festival was due to take place over the August bank holiday weekend.
The Business Improvement District (BID) organisation said it felt social distancing "would not be possible" at the free-admission event.
It said it hoped for a "bigger and better" edition next year.
William Bryant, chairman of the Bury BID, said: "We’ve taken this decision reluctantly after watching and waiting over the past three months in the hope it could have happened in a safe way.
"However I very much hope that next year we’ll see the festival return and Bury St Edmunds will continue to be regarded as Suffolk’s foodie town."
A woman who has been shielding for three months reacts to the government's lockdown rules relaxation.
Read MoreThe CPS has yet to respond to an appeal against its decision not to bring manslaughter charges.
Read MoreA pub which was in the Guinness Book of Records for being the UK's smallest says it is too tiny to reopen.
Read MoreThe letter was posted in London in 1966 but has only just arrived at its destination in Ipswich.
Read MoreThe amount of revenue lost by the tourism sector in Norfolk and Suffolk during lockdown has been put at £1.9bn.
MHS Larking Gowen's Covid-19 impact report, external found businesses had experienced the equivalent of "three winters" through the loss of revenue at Easter, and two Bank Holidays.
Chris Scargill, a partner in the company, said: "Businesses that we surveyed anticipated on average it would take them nearly three and a half years to get them back into a position as to where they were pre-Covid.
"And that's of course if they survive through to next April when we start to see the normal season starting to ramp up."
A dancer praises an online festival that helps young artists get noticed in difficult times.
Read MoreTwo arrests have been made after a woman cyclist in her 40s was left in a critical condition after an accident involving a van.
Suffolk Police, external said the incident happened at about 13:10 on Monday, on the B1077, a mile south of Helmingham near Ipswich.
She was taken by helicopter to Addenbrooke's Hospital with a head injury.
The incident involved a white Ford Transit van with a distinctive orange light on the roof which was travelling south towards Ashbocking.
Police arrested a man and a woman in the van on suspicion of causing serious injury by dangerous driving, and officers are appealing for witnesses or dashcam footage.
Isobel Sheppard had her right leg amputated during lockdown and was not able to see her family.
Read MorePatrick Byrne
BBC News
Eight old bells are being temporarily removed from a Suffolk church and a new set of three cast in The Netherlands will join them to create a ring of 10.
Work has already started on the bells to be rehung in the tower of the church of St Peter and St Mary, external in Stowmarket this week.
Bellhangers are overseeing the removal of the old eight and the first of the new bells were due to be taken down to the aisle today.
"It will take two or three days before all eight are down and then they will be taken by lorry to Bridport, Dorset where work will begin to refurbish and establish a new ring of 10," Lynda Rochester of the Stowmarket Bells Project Team, said.
"One of the old bells (the treble) is in poor condition and will not be kept. We anticipate the new ring of 10 bells to be brought to Stowmarket from Bridport in the summer and look forward to welcoming visitors as soon as safety regulations allow.”
The new treble is in memory of the much loved doctor Peter Franks and his wife Sheila.
The £179,000 project has been funded by grants and donations, including a £95,100 Heritage Lottery Fund, external windfall.
Immigrants from Caribbean islands came to work in Ipswich in the 1950s and 1960s.
Read MoreSurf photographer Si Crowther is stuck in his flat in Ipswich instead of touring the globe.
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