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Ontario is sticking with its plan letting local health units take the lead on COVID-19 restrictions as the province set
stanley cup yet another record for new cases, topping 1,400 for the first time and increasing pressure on Premier Doug Ford to take broader action. The only way that we are going to be able to beat this, folks, is by a targeted approach, Ford said Wednesday as the Ministry of Health reported 1,426 new infections, the third all-time high in four days, with 15 deaths as the virus gains an increasing grip on vulnerable nursing home residents.The strategy developed with provincial chief medical officer Dr. David W
stanley thermosflasche illiams has come under more intense scrutiny this week given the surge in cases, with Peel Region overtaking much larger Toronto in the last day with 468 more Peel residents testing positive compared to 384 in the city. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW We shouldnt be leaving it region-by-region, especially not when were seeing such increases and such high numbers of active cases, said Todd Coleman, a former public health official in Middlesex-London and an epidemiologist at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo.High levels of commuting and other travel between health units makes it unrealistic to control the spread adequately with regional measures, added Coleman, pointing to climbing ca
stanley cup se counts elsewhere in the GTA and adjacent areas like Niagara and Waterloo. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Olcq Firefighters from across Halton remember their comrades who lost their lives during 9/11 attacks
Ethel Wilson had a wish to work until she was 100. You dont think Im just going to stay around the house, do you she told The Spectator in 2011 when she marking her 20th year working at a Hamilton Mountain fast food restaurant. She was 90 at the time.She almost made it.
stanley thermos ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW She retired in 2018 when she was 97, due to health reasons.Wilson died Dec. 9, 2020, just after turning 99 the month before, on Nov. 11. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Wilson was a beloved figure at the Wendys restaurant on Upper James Street, just south of Mohawk Road East. Customers of all ages came to the place because of her, and many called her Grandma. Store owner Peter Hogarth told Th
stanley water bottle e Spec in 2011 she could work at the business as long as she wanted because she really was the boss around here. Wilson worked as a dining room hostess, talking to customers, cleaning tables and, as she quipped, keeping the kids in line.
stanley france ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The restaurant put up a sign informing customers Wilson had passed away. Manager Marcy Bowen said it garnered lots of reaction. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW She loved her Wendys, said her son Brian Wilson. She loved her job. She loved the people. The old people, right away, when they came into the store they would come over and talk to her. She w