Police are appealing for witnesses after a blue Boardman mountain bike was stolen from outside Tim Hortons in Ipswich.
The bicycle was taken between 10.20 and 10.30 on Thursday 6 March from outside the restaurant at Anglia Retail Park.
Police are appealing for witnesses after a blue Boardman mountain bike was stolen from outside Tim Hortons in IpswichSuffolk Constabulary
Ipswich Police shared the appeal on social media, asking anyone with information to come forward.
Officers have assigned the crime reference number 37/12273/25 to the case.
Anyone who witnessed the theft or has information about the stolen blue Boardman mountain bike is asked to contact police via their online reporting system at https://orlo.uk/2zoxs or by calling 101, quoting the crime reference number.
With over 22,000 petition signatures opposing the plan, the library charity makes its final appeal before today's cabinet meeting.
Why it matters: Hours before Suffolk County Council's cabinet meets to decide on taking the library service back in-house, Suffolk Libraries is highlighting what it claims Suffolk residents will lose under council management.
The big picture: The charity has run Suffolk's libraries for 12 and a half years and claims the takeover would jeopardise nearly £2.5m in annual financial benefits and numerous innovative services.
Bruce Leeke, CEO of Suffolk Libraries, and the County Library in IpswichOliver Rouane-WilliamsIpswich.co.uk
By the numbers: Suffolk Libraries says its charity status delivers substantial financial advantages:
£690,000 contributed by Friends' groups for furniture, equipment and refurbishments
£150,000 yearly from running prison libraries
£500,000 in rates relief due to charity status
Nearly £100,000 raised annually through fundraising
Almost £1m yearly in grant funding only available to charitable organisations
What they're saying: "We urge Suffolk County Council to listen to reason, to stand by its stated mission 'to make a positive difference for Suffolk', and 'striving to improve, and securing the best possible services'," said Bruce Leeke, CEO of Suffolk Libraries.
He pleaded: "Ensure the people of Suffolk continue to benefit from the outstanding library service which has been heralded as the benchmark for excellence within the industry. Please don't make such an important decision based on flawed figures which so many Suffolk residents are clearly opposed to."
Beyond the money: Suffolk Libraries warns that several services may not continue under council control:
Arts Council funded programmes
Health and wellbeing projects such as Menopause & Me and Moving Minds
Community-led initiatives including Men Can Talk and LGBTQIA+ groups
The Be Kind to a Kid Christmas toy appeal that donated over 6,000 toys to families in need
The volunteer factor: In 2023-24, over 1,200 volunteers provided 35,500 volunteering hours to the service. The charity says many volunteers "have already stated that they will not continue if the library service is run by the county council."
For context: Suffolk Libraries has achieved numerous industry innovations, including:
First library service with a dedicated wellbeing team
One of the first to offer libraries as warm spaces during the cost-of-living crisis
First to loan eReader devices to customers
First to develop its own self-service technology, saving around £100,000
The bottom line: With growing opposition from local residents, MPs, backbench councillors and other key stakeholders, Suffolk Libraries is making a final appeal for the county council to "return to the negotiating table" before the cabinet makes its decision.