Author of the article: The Sault Star
Publishing date: May 13, 2021 • 42 minutes ago • 3 minute read •
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With an increase in vaccine from the provincial government in the coming weeks, Algoma Public Health (APH) and Algoma Ontario Health Team announce that booking will soon open for more than 7,000 new appointments at the COVID-19 Community Vaccine Hub being held at the GFL Memorial Gardens for the following dates. These clinics May 20 and 27, and June 3, 4, 10 and 11 are for first dose only. The following new groups, and previous eligible groups, including all adults aged 50 and up, are welcome to book an appointment starting Monday.
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AS REGULAR READERS will undoubtedly recall, I am not a fan of some of the changes to traffic patterns that have been foisted on us, the latest, which I have touched on before, being the right-turn lane that forces traffic to leave what was once a through lane on McNabb to now turn right onto Elmwood. Carl Rumiel, Manager, Design and Transportation Engineering, with the city, some time ago explained to me the rationale for the change. “From the east, we extended the three-lane configuration further to the east by dropping the westbound curb lane to a right turn only lane forcing vehicles to move right, again slowing traffic,” he told me in an email.
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The coronavirus 2019 means different things to different people. But the common thread that connects us all together is the resiliency and inherently powerful relationship we all have with life itself.
It isnât just about being born then facing death when our time comes, it is what goes on in between those monumental bookends of our lives. This pandemic has had an unprecedented impact on how we approach life on a day-to-day basis while balancing these commitments with our mental health, wellbeing and identity.
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The coronavirus 2019 means different things to different people. But the common thread that connects us all together is the resiliency and inherently powerful relationship we all have with life itself.
It isnât just about being born then facing death when our time comes, it is what goes on in between those monumental bookends of our lives. This pandemic has had an unprecedented impact on how we approach life on a day-to-day basis while balancing these commitments with our mental health, wellbeing and identity.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser. Nothing healthy about playing âblame gameâ Back to video
Article content
The coronavirus 2019 means different things to different people. But the common thread that connects us all together is the resiliency and inherently powerful relationship we all have with life itself.
It isnât just about being born then facing death when our time comes, it is what goes on in between those monumental bookends of our lives. This pandemic has had an unprecedented impact on how we approach life on a day-to-day basis while balancing these commitments with our mental health, wellbeing and identity.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser. Nothing healthy about playing âblame gameâ Back to video