Commissions across the country are in the process of making both big and small changes to ridings changes which could have consequences both for the quality of representation Canadians receive and the outcome of future elections.
"Look at how many people came," Misha Perozak said on a rail bridge over St. Clair Avenue, part of what may one day be a multi-use trail connecting southwestern Scarborough
"Look at how many people came," Misha Perozak said on a rail bridge over St. Clair Avenue, part of what may one day be a multi-use trail connecting southwestern Scarborough
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Pop-up vaccine clinics have been deployed to some of the hardest-hit neighbourhoods in Toronto over the past couple of weeks in an effort to improve access in marginalized communities that have been disproportionately impacted by the virus, but the first-come-first-served nature of the clinics is resulting in ridiculously long lineups.
Take the days-long pop-up in the Jane and Finch area, for example, which saw thousands of Humber River-Black Creek residents who have postal codes beginning with M3N vaccinated this week.
There’s a pop-up tomorrow in our Scarborough neighbourhood we will attempt to line-up for, but why should the hardest-hit communities camp out overnight and wait for hours for a limited number of vaccines, with no way of knowing when the next pop-up will appear? Horrible. https://t.co/WWxKbCLsYk