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A major new jobs training program aimed at helping Alberta workers adapt to a changing economy will be announced in the coming weeks.
On Thursday, provincial Finance Minister Travis Toews said Albertans should “stay tuned” for an official announcement on the Alberta Jobs Now program, which is expected to provide a grant to eligible employers to provide Albertans opportunities to upgrade their skills as well as to encourage employers to create jobs to get unemployed Albertans back to work.
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Edmonton engineers, business leaders high on proposed river-valley gondola project
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Opinion: The urgent need for widespread rapid testing Special to National Post © Provided by National Post A medical worker performs a COVID-19 swab test upon a woman at a rapid-testing station at the Panagia Evangelistria Greek Orthodox Church in Cyprus capital Nicosia on Jan. 29.
The following open letter arguing for the adoption of widespread rapid testing in Canada was signed by 28 members of the medical and business communities. As the second wave of the pandemic continues, infection rates and hospitalizations are rising in many parts of Canada. Both lives and livelihoods are tragically being lost each day. In a response that was previously unimaginable, many Canadians were prohibited from gathering to see friends and family over the holidays, and many businesses are again forced to close in an effort to stop the spread of the virus. In Quebec, a curfew has been put in place for the first time and Ontario has now implemented an unprecedented general
Alberta delays lifting lockdowns now that COVID variants have arrived on the scene While Alberta has been a hotbed of anti-lockdown sentiment for some time, a handful of businesses around the province have begun flouting restrictions in recent weeks
Author of the article: Tyler Dawson
Publishing date: Jan 26, 2021 • January 26, 2021 • 4 minute read • Anna Posteraro gets her hair styled by Alysha Goertzen at Alyshageehair on Tuesday January 19, 2021. The government of Alberta allowed hair salons to re-open for business in the province this week after a lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic. Photo by Larry Wong/Postmedia
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EDMONTON The presence in Alberta of roughly two-dozen cases of COVID-19 variants first discovered in the United Kingdom and South Africa will delay any further relaxation of the province’s lockdown rules while officials monitor the threat the variants pose to the health-care system.
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