Auteur Sujet: ztxv UNSAFE : Stay out the water at this Burlington beach  (Lu 20 fois)

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ztxv UNSAFE : Stay out the water at this Burlington beach
« le: Novembre 09, 2024, 03:09:38 am »
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 VANCOUVER 鈥?More than a month had passed before Antonette Rea found the note her young friend had written her before fatally overdosing earlier this year.Thank you so much for saving my lif vaso stanley e, Rea reads aloud to a crowd of 80 people packed into a community hall in the tony Vancouver neighbourhood of Kitsilano.I love your dancing and your singing and sorry for using all of your nail polish and art supplies, she continues, prompting laughter from the otherwise silent audience. She smiles and puts down the note: I called her Jilly Bean. Jilly.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        Rea was one of more than a half-dozen drug users and first responders based in Vancouver   Downtown Eastside who shared their stories with residents living elsewhere in the city over the past six weeks as part of a series of overdose awareness and prevention workshops.Monday evening   gathering in Kitsilano was the last of six events aimed at delivering stories fromstanley cup  the front line of British Columbia   overdose epidemic stanley thermobecher .        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 Jackie Wong helped facilitate the program, which was organized by the Overdose Prevention Society and Megaphone Magazine, a monthly publication sold by homeless and low-income vendors.It is important the overdose conversation happens beyond the Downtown Eastside, in neighbourhoods where drug use is not as public, Wong said.     Niey Mon Sheong kicks off $30M fundraising campaign for new Stouffville facility
 Toronto City Councillor Josh Matlow has entered self-isolation in the basement of his midtown home following an event at Beth Sholom Synagogue where he was exposed to a COVID-19 patient.The Toronto-St.Pauls councillor was at the Eglin stanley mugs ton West synagogue on March 5 in support of its Out of the Cold Shelter program when he had a conversation with a lay leader at the synagogue who had recently returned from a conference in Washington, D.C.He was in a meeting at City Hall on Monday morning when his assistant entered shortly before 10 a.m. to break the news: another member of the synagogue had called to say the lay leader had tested positive for COVID-19.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                     stanley cup      We got the call and I just beelined it home,  Matlow told toronto. There are currently 17 positive cases of the novel stanley deutschland  coronavirus in Toronto.聽Matlow, who has not been tested for the virus, said he is asymptomatic and is following the advice of Toronto Medical Officer of Health Dr. Eileen de Villa to self-isolate until March 20  out of an abundance of caution.         ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 Because he is asymptomatic, Matlow is not concerned about his own health outcome or the possibility of having transmitted COVID-19 to anyone else. He said his first thoughts after learning of the exposure at Beth Sholom were of the synagogue and the people who use its shelter program. First of all I was concerned for the Out of the Cold