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Rdsn COVID-19 hospializations in Ontario up 20 per cent over last week
Some Ontario school boards plan to abandon the much-derided quadmester system for high schoolers come September, though students will still have to sit through extra-long classes.The Toronto District School Board and Halton District School Board have told parents that they will go ahead with a modified semester system that would see students take four courses over a longer term, alternating which two classes they have each week.The modified semester offers more face-to-face time between students and teachers, encouraging an opportunity to build relationships and support an increased sense of belonging in class, the Toronto board said in a message to parents. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW It also offers a slower pace by learning over a longer period of time than the quadmester model.Both <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>gourde stanley</a> the TDSB and HDSB said the plan has the Ministry of Education stamp of approval. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The move comes after the boards said the Ministry of Education <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley cup</a> directed them last month to continue with the quadmester system in order to prevent <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley cup</a> kids from mixing with too many of their peers, for fear they might spread COVID-19.Quadmesters, put in place for the 2020-2021 school year, saw students take two courses at a time for a period of roughly nine weeks. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW In lieu Oaje Guesthouse shelter may get help from Town of Midland to open doors
As Ontarios eviction moratorium has lifted, <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup</a> new research shows that the Toronto neighbourhoods where tenants have faced the highest eviction filing rates in recent years mirror those where COVID-19 has hit hardest.The findings, shared exclusively with the Star, suggest that if a wave of evictions f <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.it>stanley tumblers</a> ollows the pandemic 鈥?as tenant advocates fear 鈥?residents of the same neighbourhoods will bear the brunt of a secondary crisis.Its a parallel that Scott Leon, who co-authored Wednesdays study for the Wellesley Institute, called troubling. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW It really shows that evictions are hitting communities that already being hit by COVID, and so weve got these kind of compounding challenges, Leon said.Leon and co-author James Iveniuk examined eviction filing data from Ontarios Landlord and Tenant Board from 2010 to 2018. While they found that one in every 20 Toronto renter households in 2018 faced eviction applications, in some neighbourhoods that rate was as high as one in five. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Most of the 140 neighbourhoods had eviction filing rates between two and six per cent. But 14 had rates higher than eight per cent, and eight neighbourhoods had rates that exceeded 10 per cent.Many of those neighbourhoods matched a recent Star analysis of sporadic COVID-19 cases, which showed that areas in the citys northwest corne <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley uk</a> r have been hit hardest by the coronavirus in re