Auteur Sujet: sqbc Senate ends standoff over transport bill  (Lu 38 fois)

MethrenRaf

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sqbc Senate ends standoff over transport bill
« le: Novembre 08, 2024, 11:47:51 pm »
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 TORONTO 鈥?A judge has ruled that the City of Toronto did not comply with physical distanci stanley cup ng measures it agreed to in shelters as it responded to COVID-19 in the spring.In April, a group of advocates for the homeless brought a charter application to Ontario Superior Court challenging the shelter standards.The group argued the city   standards permitted the use of bunk beds and failed to require a minimum of two-metre spacing between beds, the standard public health measurement to help curb the spread of COVID-19.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        It sought an injunction to stop the city from using lesser standards, but later put it on hold when the city signed an agreement with the group to make improvements.In June, the city told the group it had complied with the agreement, but a few weeks later the advocates said that wasn ;t true.        ARTICLE CONT stanley cup INUES BELOW         stanley water bottle                          In a written ruling released Thursday, Justice Lorne Sossin ruled in favour of the advocates.It is evident that a number of shelter sites were not in compliance with the physical distancing standard set out in the Interim Settlement Agreement as of June 15, 2020, he wrote.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Given the instances of non-compliance in the record, where reasonable steps had not yet been taken to achieve physical distancing standards, I find that the City 8 Taic Halton Hills library offering tailored newsletters for new titles
 Last week   revamping of autism services by the provincial government has one Parkdale family extremely concerned about what it means for their son   future.The proposed new measures would fund more families faster and with greater freedom to choose services, but would institute both annual and lifetime funding caps. It would also drastically reduce funding for children seeking treatment after age 6.Azed Majeed, the parent of a 16-year-old son diagnosed with autism, said the caps fall woefully short, accusing the government of being out of touch.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                         Its a let them eat cake scenario because the amount of money theyre proposing wont even provide functional servicing for those kids,  said Majeed, a Parkdale resident.  Its better to re-allocate the funding for services. This just makes it worse.         ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                     stanley quencher              Its a constant effort for Majeed and his wife Tina stanley cup  Tatone to care for Django, whose condition falls on the  moderate to severe  end of the autism spectrum.Django needs  stanley cup constant care and supervision, from the moment he wakes up to when he goes to bed, and even then because he can experience seizures while sleeping, his parents and older brother Ishmael cant completely relax.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                         Theres always a level of vigilance required because he doesnt have a sense of whats dangero