Jim Massey
NOT IN MILK: Like most milk bottlers, Kwik Trip still includes an rBST disclaimer on the labels of the thousands of gallons of milk the company sells each day. Sales of gallon and half-gallon jugs of milk have been “up significantly” during the pandemic, Kwik Trip officials report. Synthetic growth hormone rBST has become a “virtual non-issue.”
By Jim Massey | Mar 03, 2021
Consumers often ask what is in the food they eat, and for good reason.
But when it comes to milk, they can rest assured there are two things that are
not in what comes out of the gallon jug they pour into their glass or onto their cereal antibiotics and recombinant bovine somatotropin.
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Alberta is providing $68.5 million to continuing care operators to help with COVID-19 supply costs and increased staffing.
Premier Jason Kenney said the funding includes $10 million for home care providers and $10 million for residential addiction and mental health treatment facilities.
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“Our fight is far from over, with contagious new variants emerging around the world, including here in Canada, we must do more to protect those in continuing care and other facilities and for individuals who receive home care,” said Kenney at a Wednesday news conference.
Alberta Premier Announces Support for Facility Operators – February 3, 2021
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney holds a news conference in Edmonton to announce support for the province’s continuing care operators, residential addiction and mental health treatment facilities, and home care providers during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. He is joined from Calgary by provincial Health Minister Tyler Shandro. Richard Gotfried, MLA for Calgary-Fish Creek, and Kim O’Brien, president and CEO of United Active Living Inc., also take part in the news conference. (no interpretation)
Kenney to announce COVID-19 support for continuing care, mental health facilities edmonton.ctvnews.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from edmonton.ctvnews.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
OUT-OF-THIS-WORLD work by students in lockdown has won their Ellesmere Port school a top award. Year 7 and 8 students at Ellesmere Port Catholic High School worked hard on the Life on Mars project, which saw pupils get astronomically creative, including the creation of a stop-motion animation, a virtual reality world and well-researched concepts of how humans could get to, and live on, the Red Planet. Ellesmere Port Catholic High students award-winning Life on Mars project. Part of a stop-motion animation depicting the launch from Earth and landing and exploring Mars. The extensive work, done as a joint venture between the school and careers education charity 4wardfutures, was even more impressive as it was carried out during the 15th week of the first coronavirus lockdown, long after most students had stopped attending lessons in person.