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The Retail Council of Canada RCC is urging the provincial government to allow all stores in Ontario malls to reopen on Friday 鈥?not solely the ones with street-facing entrances.聽In a news release on June 9, the association, which represents retailers across the country, said聽its members have absorbed unbearable financial, emotional stress, job losses and business closures, all without improving health outcomes.The RCC cited recent data from Statistics Canada latest Labour Force Survey which shows that聽Ontario has lost 85,500 retail jobs since February 2020 and that 32,300 of those jobs are from May 2021
stanley becher alone. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Earlier this week, Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced that the province would be moving into Step One of its reo
stanley mugs pening plan on June 11. This means that retail deemed non-essential will be permitted to reopen at a reduced capacity of 15 per cent. However, retail stores in malls that are not accessible via an outside entrance must remain closed.聽 ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Positivity rates are the lowest theyve been in nine months, vaccination rates are high and hospital ICU numbers are steadily falling, the RCC release reads.
gourde stanley We strongly encourage the Ontario government to let all retailers reopen on June 11 at reduced capacities, including those within malls. Retailers have had no choice but to Dttk Firefighters combat blazes on French island of Corsica
Margaret Anderson, founder of Ian Anderson House in Oakville and a pioneer of palliative care in Ontario, has died.She was 93.Anderson opened the residential hospice almost 25 years ago in honour of her late husband Ian, who died of colon cancer in 1990. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW At the time of his death, there were no residential hospices in Ontario and little support was available in terms of home care. Because of her experience of caring for her husband in the last few months of his life, the physical and emotional toll, the sense of isolation and the feeling of fear and uncertainty, Anderson decided to build a hospice in memory of her husband so that families in a situation like hers could be cared for and supported, said Heidi Harrigan, volunteer and ev
stanley shop ents co-ordinator at Ian Anderson House. At that time no one saw the need for hospice, but Margaret, an extremely determined and tenacious woman, appealed to every level government until her persistence paid off and
stanley cup she was able to open the hospice in Nov. 1997 on the seventh anniversary of Ians death. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Ia
stanley taza n Anderson House is now one of many residential hospices in Ontario. Andersons tireless efforts were a catalyst for palliative care and the hospice movement and for more than two decades, she helped to shape and remould attitudes toward caring for the dying, said Harrigan.Over the last 25 years she received nu