Stock photoKarolina Grabowska/Pexels
(Correction #2) Potential exposure to COVID-19 at a Department of Community Services office, on various Halifax Transit routes, and on Air Canada and WestJet flights
(Correction) Potential exposure to COVID-19 at a Department of Community Services office, on various Halifax Transit routes, and on Air Canada and WestJet flights
NEWS RELEASE
Nova Scotia Health Public Health is advising of potential exposure to COVID-19 at a Department of Community Services office, on various Halifax Transit routes, and on Air Canada and WestJet flights. In addition to media releases, all potential exposure notifications are listed here: http://www.nshealth.ca/covid-
Father of Nova Scotia toddler with severe injuries looking for answers atlantic.ctvnews.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from atlantic.ctvnews.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Posted: Apr 23, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: April 23
The girl was air-lifted to the IWK Health Centre in Halifax on Friday from a hospital on the South Shore with life-threatening injuries.(Brett Ruskin/CBC)
The father of a two-year-old girl lying in an intensive care bed at a Halifax children s hospital says the system has failed her.
The girl was rushed to the IWK Health Centre by air ambulance last Friday, suffering from life-threatening injuries. RCMP are investigating the incident as a possible case of aggravated assault.
Neither the girl nor her father can be identified.
The girl has been spending weekends with her father. He said last weekend, he noticed she had bruises.
Posted: Apr 16, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: April 16
Stanley Hemming, 61, waits every week to find out if his hotel stay will be renewed.(Steve Lawrence/CBC)
Evicted from his Halifax apartment on March 31 for rental arrears, Stanley Hemming packed a few changes of clothes, some essential paperwork and little else.
He went to the hospital, in part because as a diabetic, he knew his blood sugar was dangerously high. But in equal part, he hoped to be admitted just so he would have a place to sleep that night.
Hemming, 61, wasn t admitted to hospital that day, but to his relief, he was offered a bed elsewhere. Staff with the Nova Scotia Department of Community Services placed Hemming in a hotel room, where he s been living ever since.