Jriv It could take months to stop spread of COVID-19: Hamilton public health
The federal government has quietly given a subsidiary of East Coast business giant J.D. Irving Ltd. more than $40 million in funding t
stanley vattenflaska hat an expert says could have trade implications for the New Brunswick firm.Atlantic Wallboard LP received the so-called conditionally repayable contributions between 2006 and 2012 from the Atlantic Canad
stanley cup a Opportunities Agency ACOA under a much-vaunted shipyard redevelopment fund.However, records obtained by The Canadian Press through an access-to-information request show that the company, which makes gypsum wallboard products commonly called drywall, has not been required to repay at least $35 million. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW In all, Atlantic Wallboard has repaid just over half a million dollars 鈥?or 1.3 per cent of the total loans.The funding represents a polarizing approach to economic development that critics dismiss as handouts for private companies, while proponents argue it spurs investments and creates jobs. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Both Irving and ACOA say the company has met all the financing conditions, exceeding its investment requirements
stanley cup and creating a sustainable, long-term business.But an economics expert says the federal agency used murky language by calling the money conditionally repayable to describe what is effectively a subsidy. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Ian McAlliste Jlch COVID-19 outbreak at CAMH grows with 5 patients now confirmed positive
Michelle Woodward has spent the last year on edge, shooing friends and family away from her home and fiddling with mask after mas
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stanley cup spain to keep Cole, her immunocompromised 14-year-old son, safe from a virus that would, at the very least, send him to the ICU.And so, Woodward, 43, breathed an audible sigh of relief earlier this week when the Hospital for Sick Children called to book her son for the COVID-19 vaccine. I was so excited, she said. And Cole was so excited. In fact, hes never been so excited to get a vaccine in his life. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW High-risk youths and their parents across the province were collectively exhaling with relief last week as their 12-to-15-year-olds were finally in line to be inoculated against the virus that has been threatening to derail their already-f
stanley cup ragile health for more than a year.However, the race for vaccination spots is already on. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Demand is very high, Andrew Kennedy, manager at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre vaccine clinic, told the Star. After he released his first batch of appointments for online booking on Monday afternoon, all 1,400 spots for the week were filled almost instantly. He said hell only be able to release more spots when he can confirm hell get more vaccines. Even through provincial health authorities have indicated youths with underlying conditions, including developmental delays and D