Sydneysiders with a spare $6,000 can still enjoy a lavish New Year s Eve on the harbour at the last minute despite tightened restrictions for the fireworks display.
Charter boat companies will still be sailing on Thursday night, with industry insiders revealing discounted prices are on offer due to a lack of international tourists and the latest Covid-19 outbreak.
The vessels are not limited by the newly introduced five person private gathering restriction and are instead treated the same as hospitality venues, meaning they must abide by the one person per four square metre rule.
Sydneysiders with a spare $6,000 can enjoy a lavish New Year s Eve on the harbour despite tightened restrictions for the fireworks display. Pctured: Ships pass under the Sydney Harbour Bridge at the end of the 2019 New Year s Eve celebrations
How to watch Sydney New Year s Eve fireworks from the harbour goldcoastbulletin.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from goldcoastbulletin.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Winnipeg Free Press
Unclear which communities will get first Moderna shots By: Dylan Robertson
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Manitoba Metis Federation president David Chartrand: “Ottawa has a fiduciary responsibility for Indigenous people, on and off reserve.
OTTAWA Manitoba’s Indigenous leaders are getting antsy about who will get the yet-to-be approved Moderna vaccine against COVID-19, which could arrive in the province next week.
OTTAWA Manitoba’s Indigenous leaders are getting antsy about who will get the yet-to-be approved Moderna vaccine against COVID-19, which could arrive in the province next week.
The federal government has convened a committee in an attempt to get Indigenous leaders and provinces on the same page ahead of a vaccine roll-out no one expected to come so soon. However, Ottawa says it won’t strong-arm provinces who fail to uphold their constitutional duty to protect Indigenous peop
Mary Corbett lives in a Winnipeg care home that has lost more than 10 per cent of its residents during a COVID-19 outbreak.
Mary Corbett lives in a Winnipeg care home that has lost more than 10 per cent of its residents during a COVID-19 outbreak.
Corbett, a former baker in Swan River who celebrated her 103rd birthday in July at Park Manor, is one of the lucky ones. She has recovered from a bout of the novel coronavirus and returned to her regular room, after being quarantined in another room for almost two weeks. The only real symptom she complained about was being sleepy, her daughter, Jackie Greig, said Thursday.