Lnmy Completion of Maricopa Trail links parks around Phoenix
TORONTO 鈥?Ontario will send half its vaccine supply to hot spots for the next two weeks and hopes to make all adults eligible for COVID-19 shots by the last week of May thanks to the expected arrival of millions of doses.The acceleration in the vaccine effort was announced Thursday as the province science advisers said cases rates were high but decreasing under a stay-at-home order, although further limits on essential workplaces were needed to bring the d
stanley thermoskannen evastating third wave under control.The government has been criticized for a slow and bumpy vaccine rollout while cases have soared but Health Minister Christine Elliott said a massive influx of doses in the coming weeks would help the province emerge from the pandemic. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The way out of the pandemic is vaccines, and a light at the end of the tunnel grows brighter every day, she said.The province will send half its vaccine supply for the first two weeks of May to 114 postal codes identified as hot spots, an increase from the 25 per cent allocation those areas currently get. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The move follows a recommendation from the province science
stanley quencher advisers to allocate shots based on transmission rate rather than age group to reduce hospitalizations and deaths due to COVID-19.The government said it will return to a per capita distribut
stanley thermos ion for vaccines on the week of May 17. Voyo Brampton residents concerned about transparency in release of coronavirus data
Ward 15 Coun. Judi Partridge is celebrating the Ontario governments decision
stanley website to pull the plug on Hamiltons LRT and sees it as an opportunity to build a transit system that connects the entire city.The cancellation of the 14-km light rail transit project which would have connected McMaster University to Eastgate Square due to purported cost overruns was announced Dec. 16 by Transportation Minister Caroline Mulroney following an aborted news conference in downtown Hamilton. The province has said it will create a task force to examine alternative options for the $1-billion funding put up for the now defunct project.In a December press release Partridge, who came out in opposition to the LRT in March 2017 and campaigned against the project during the 2018 municipal election, said she was encouraged by the provinces cancellation of the wasteful and u
stanley puodelis nnecessary downtown LRT project. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Partridge said in an interview she wanted to put out her position on the cancellation and said the announcement that Hamilton can use the funding for transportation and other approved projects is a once-in-a-lifetime windfall that will benefit every corner of our city 鈥?not just the downtown corridor. I believe this is a real opportunity that we need to take hold of, said the Flamborough councillor, while stressing that the $1 billion is not coming directly to the City
stanley drinking cup of Hamilton, but instead going to Metrolinx to invest