The Reminder is making its archives back to 2003 available on our website. Please note that, due to technical limitations, archive articles are presented without the usual formatting.
Continued from pg. 8 Nagy has since gone door to door and online to collect signatures in support of Jimmy's Law, which is modelled after a similar law in B.C. Along the way, Nagy has been interviewed by local media as well as two major television outlets, CTV and Global. As of Sept. 13, his petition had some 5,700 signatures. While no one downplays the tragedy of Wiebe's death, some are questioning whether Nagy has the right solution in mind. Doug Hartl, vice-chair of the Western Convenience Store Association, told CTV there is no proof that having two employees working overnight is any safer "Banks are always robbed during the day time, they're always robbed when there's more than one clerk and there are always customers in there," he said. "So multiple people doesn't reduce the propensity of violence, matter of fact the more people there is, the more propensity for someone, for more than one person to get hurt or killed." Nagy, 29, worked at CFAR from July to November of 2006 before landing work at another radio station in Dauphin. He later moved to Yorkton, where he continues to work in radio.