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Woodstock police will not conduct random COVID-19 stops: Chief
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Woodstock police will not conduct random COVID-19 stops: Chief
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How teenagers are coping in the COVID-19 pandemic
This was supposed to be their time to launch into the world, but then the world closed down. Some teens have been resilient, but others have had worsening mental-health problems – and the long-term effects on their lives may not be clear for a long time Bookmark Please log in to listen to this story. Also available in French and Mandarin. Log In Create Free Account
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Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail
For almost 12 months now, Canada’s teenagers have essentially been locked up with their parents. By the time the pandemic ends, two sets of graduations and proms will have been cancelled, along with a year and a half of sports tournaments, school plays, movies, dates and parties – basically, everything they’d been promised would make the final years of high school the best of their vanishing childhoo
Author of the article: Norman De Bono
Publishing date: Feb 22, 2021 • February 22, 2021 • 2 minute read • The owner of the Ale House on Dundas Street in downtown London often use its sign to express its opinion. One that referenced the China virus drew community backlash, and was replaced Thursday by this one, which included the same phrase. (Derek Ruttan/The London Free Press)
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Police erred in not charging a downtown London bar owner for signage some call divisive and even racist, one legal activist says.
Sam Trosow, a Western University law professor, said he believes the signs outside Dundas Street’s Ale House – which called COVID-19 the “China virus,” sparking intense public criticism – may violate Canada’s hate-speech laws.
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Without them, the Woodman Avenue explosion would have been much worse.
Thursday afternoon, London police saluted the officers, first responders, behind-the-scenes staff members, and ordinary citizens who without pausing to think about their own safety prevented the blast on Aug. 14, 2019, in London’s Old East Village from becoming an even greater tragedy.
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“In the face of unknown danger . . . heroes emerged from all directions to offer assistance” police Chief Steve Williams said during a 20-minute virtual ceremony. He prefaced that remark by saying he doesn’t use the term “hero” lightly.
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