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CALGARY 鈥?About two-thirds of Calgarians and Bow Valley residents support a bid for the 2026 Winter Olympics and Paralympics, a new poll suggests.The Calgary Bid Exploration Committee surveyed approximately 2,000 residents from Calgary, Cochrane, Canmore and Banff.About 64 per cent of those surveyed either supported or strongly supported a bid for the 2026 Winter Games, but only 53 per cent were confident the bid process would be cost conscious and budgets would be managed well. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW There is tremendous value in not only gathering, but truly understanding, the opinions of Calgarians and area residents, committee chair Rick Hanson said Tuesday in a statement. As a committee, we are invested in putting Calgarys vision first. This means looking into every opportunity and concern identified by citizens during the bid exploration process.The survey was conducted online and by telephone between March 6 and 19 by the exploration committee research partner Stone-Olafson.
stanley thermoskannen ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The polling industry professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not rand
stanley canada omly sample the population.The exploration group will submit a final report to city council July 24.
botella stanley ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Hkql Massive frozen mango recall warning impacting No Frills, FreshCo, Costco, Food Basics, Metro, Sobeys and other grocery stores prompts statement from Ontario Chief Medical Officer of Health
Warnings about the impact of COVID-19 on nursing homes were relayed to the Ontario government in late January as executives watched carnage unfold abroad, but Premier Doug Fords action
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stanley quencher n didnt come until mid-April when at least 144 residents had already died in 100 outbreaks, a commission investigating the heavy toll has been told. We certainly knew just from the media about the vulnerability of our residents, Donna Duncan, chief executive of the Ontario Long-Term Care Association, said in an online appearance before the commission appointed by Fords government in July.Complicating the response to the virus that swept through nursing homes 鈥?killing more than 1,953 residents and eight staff members 鈥?were government cuts to pharmacy services for long-term care, long-standing staff shortages, a lack of personal protective equipment, and government insistence on inspections for compliance with pre-pandemic regulations instead of preparing homes for the viruss relentless onslaught, Duncan added. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
stanley flasche She said the association, which represents 70 per cent of Ontarios more than 600 long-term-care facilities, asked the government in late January to free up inspectors to point out shortcomings that the highly contagious virus could exploit in nursing homes, many of them older with rooms holding three or four residents that fuelled the spread. We were concerned about our state of readiness after seeing hospi