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able to go round his Distries with the object of being able to advise his authority or Government upon what improvements they can make, propond alterations in existing laws, and so on, and he ought to be able to investigate disease.
13125 Would it not also be part of his professional duties to
investigate nuisances 1
Mr Shelton Hooper:-
کا
Yes. For instance, there is the Aberdeen paper Mill nuisance. There is no Inspector who would deal with that as I would, knowing the matter as something being
But in injurious to health. An Inspector cant say, ordinary nuisances, it does not require a professional
man's opinion.
Speaking of the notices, just now you said that the 13/26 Sanitary Inspector, if he has got a oomplaint, tells the Secretary, and the Secretary sends a notice. If it is anything abnormal, that is what I will call a big noties. Before it reaches that stage, has not the Inspector ever, even off his own bat, written out a
pencil notice, and left it at the house ?
A.
He has.
15127
27 70
By whose authority has he done that ↑ your authority
Did he do it by
A.
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Q.
A.
A.
། ། ན། ་། ། །
PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE
Reference:-
C.O. 537
36
Section 8 of the Standing Orders for District
Inspectors says "District Inspectors are required to servo an informal notios or memorandum, in writing, and on the form supplied to them for the purpose, in respect of every nuisance or illegality, which is
causes by the occupier".
And he does that before it comes to your notice 13128
YOB.
13024
And he does that, if he carries out these orders properly, in every nuisance that he firis in the Colony,
"which is caused by the occupier”.
RECORD OFFICE, LONDON OUT PERMISSION OF THE PUBLIC REPRODUCED PHOTOGRAPHICALLY WITH- COPYRIGHT PHOTOGRAPH NOT TO BE
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