 My name is Theresa Chiano and I'm the Partnership Manager for GoSafe, where a partnership made up of the Welsh Government, the four Welsh police forces and the 22 local authorities in Wales. Operation Snap was started by a sergeant working for GoSafe in North Wales and he was frequently contacted by his colleagues who had had reports from members of the public whether he witnessed dangerous or possibly illegal driving on the roads. Cyn Operation Snap ddod oedd rhaid i'r heddiw yma sy'n gasku fforddau diwrth yma'r eilod o'r cyhoedd, ddornol y ffe, buc yw mewn fel dystiolaeth, edrychw'r hwrs beth, lot o'ch papyr. Oedd yn cymryd beth ddi'n digwydd awr o amser y heddiw i ddeliw gwyde unachos. Ond ers dyfoddiad op snap, mae'n rhaid i'w hanner awr pyrdi gwynedd i eilod o'r saffyn trw'r ymdeunydd fynd mewn. We can offer people the opportunity of having a warning, going on a drive education course, or alternatively a fixed penalty or going to court, so we're able to deal with people much more effectively and appropriately now. Our police constable colleagues, they don't want to knock on a door and tell someone they've lost someone, and that's what it's all about. It's about making people drive safer. Mae'n hwladodd mawr iawn cael yn enwybyr gyfer gobrymy, a ni felch iawn y gwaith yma op snap yn ei wneud, a ni'n gyd yn fawr i'n teim yn credu'n grif iawn bod op snap yn ei gwaith ni'n ddigel chyffyr.