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Alberta hit an all-time peak for intensive-care unit admissions and reported 2,007 new COVID-19 cases Friday, its second-highest total ever, trailing only the 2,048 infections tallied Thursday.
Patients with greater chances of surviving beyond the next year should be prioritized if Alberta’s health-care system is overwhelmed by the COVID-19 pandemic, new documents released by Alberta Health Services Friday reveal.
Hundreds of Calgarians who received parking tickets while getting COVID-19 shots in the city’s downtown won’t feel their sting.
Nearly 300 workers at the Cargill meat-packing plant in High River shuffled through the onsite vaccination clinic Thursday morning, receiving their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine.
What’s happening now
Alberta hit an all-time peak for intensive-care unit admissions and reported 2,007 new COVID-19 cases Friday, its second-highest total ever, trailing only the 2,048 infections tallied Thursday.
Patients with greater chances of surviving beyond the next year should be prioritized if Alberta’s health-care system is overwhelmed by the COVID-19 pandemic, new documents released by Alberta Health Services Friday reveal.
Hundreds of Calgarians who received parking tickets while getting COVID-19 shots in the city’s downtown won’t feel their sting.
Nearly 300 workers at the Cargill meat-packing plant in High River shuffled through the onsite vaccination clinic Thursday morning, receiving their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine.
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The Calgary-based GYMVMT fitness chain will close multiple locations as part of a restructuring effort aimed at saving the business in the face of COVID-19 restrictions.
International Fitness Holdings Inc. which operates 21 fitness centres in Calgary and Edmonton under the names GYMVMT, HER GYMVMT, Bankers Hall Club and ClubFit filed a notice of intention last week to file a proposal under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.
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Try refreshing your browser, or Alberta-based fitness chain to file for bankruptcy as COVID-19 restrictions continue for fitness sector Back to video
On its website, the company said a year’s worth of public health restrictions and COVID-19 guidelines affecting the fitness industry have left the business struggling to stay above water. IFH’s fitness clubs have been closed for half of the past 14 months, and during the months the clubs have been open, they have operated with strict cap
Article content
The Calgary-based GYMVMT fitness chain will close multiple locations as part of a restructuring effort aimed at saving the business in the face of COVID-19 restrictions.
International Fitness Holdings Inc. which operates 21 fitness centres in Calgary and Edmonton under the names GYMVMT, HER GYMVMT, Bankers Hall Club and ClubFit filed a notice of intention last week to file a proposal under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser, or GYMVMT to file for bankruptcy as COVID-19 restrictions continue for fitness sector Back to video
On its website, the company said a year’s worth of public health restrictions and COVID-19 guidelines affecting the fitness industry have left the business struggling to stay above water. IFH’s fitness clubs have been closed for half of the past 14 months, and during the months the clubs have been open, they have operated with strict capacity restrictions.
EDMONTON Alberta-based fitness club GYMVMT announced Wednesday it s shutting down an unspecified number of gyms in an effort to save the business. The company says the pandemic has had an impact on the fitness industry and that incurring the expenses of being open while not being able to offer all services put financial stress on the business. Ultimately, we have two choices hang up our sneakers and dissolve the company or fight to stay in business. We are choosing to fight, an announcement on social media read. On April 23, International Fitness Holdings Inc. – comprising of GYMVMT, HER GYMVMT, Bankers Hall Club and ClubFit – filed an NOI, or notice of intention, to file a proposal under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. The move creates time for another party to buy the business.