Poxg Toronto police concerned for safety of missing 30-year-old man
SOUTH MUSKOKA 鈥?The folks behind Andys House, the first palliative care hospice in South Muskoka, are excited to open their doors with three beds at the ready.Matt Hanes, of the Andy Potts Memorial Foundation, said he received a call from Parry Sound-Muskoka MPP Norm Miller announcing they had received $315,000 in provincial funding annually.He immediately picked up the phone and call
stanley cup ed Sandra Winspear, executive director of Hospice Muskoka, the foundations Bob Potts, and Brock Napier, a major supporter of the project. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW According to Winspear, each bed includes 24-hour nursing care, clinical staff and personal support workers 鈥?among other things 鈥?and costs about $105,000.Miller confirmed th
stanley becher e unofficial announcement. The conversation with Hanes stemmed from a meeting with the Minister of Health the MPP attended during the Rural Ontario Municipal Association conference. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The ask of the ministry from Muskoka municipalities and Hospice Muskoka was for operational funding for Andy House. An official announcement is anticipated to occur soon during a walk-through of the facility.The hospice, located in Port Carling, is designed to house 10 beds and is slated to open sometim
stanley vattenflaska e this spring. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Hospice Muskoka staff and the new director of care, Charmaine Kaye, were hi Fjhg You are not alone : Former NHL goalie featured in Halton Suicide Prevention Coalition webcast
Since the start of the COVID-19 crisis, the TTC h
stanley tumbler as made frequent cleaning of its vehicles a staple of its pandemic response.The transit agency instituted enhanced disinfection protocols even before officials declared COVID-19 a global emergency, and TTC officials have cited their e
stanley cup arly adoption of frequent cleaning as evidence of the organizations proactive approach to fighting the virus.But that attention to cleanliness appears to have come with a potentially troubling tradeoff. According to a Star analysis of the most recently available TTC data, vehicle cleaning has become the leading cause of bus service delays during the pandemic. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW That has some observers urging the agency to rethink its approach, particularly in light of incre
stanley cup asingly clear evidence that the risk of transmitting the virus via surfaces is low, and the fact that delays have the potential to exacerbate crowding on buses that could be more dangerous. They should reconsider it, said Colin Furness, an epidemiologist and assistant professor at the University of Toronto. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW If surface cleaning is causing bus delays to the extent that its possibly causing more crowding on buses, thats incredibly counterproductive. The TTC implemented a regimen of daily vehicle disinfections in January 2020, about two months before the WHO declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. According to the t