. Toronto General Hospital is a major teaching hospital in downtown Toronto Toronto is home to twenty public hospitals including the Hospital for Sick Children Mount Sinai Hospital St Michael's Hospital North York General Hospital Toronto General Hospital Toronto Western Hospital Etobicoke General Hospital St Joseph's Health Centre Scarborough General Hospital Scarborough Grace Hospital Centenary Hospital Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) and Princess Margaret Cancer Centre many of which are affiliated with the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine In 2007 Toronto was reported as having some of the longer average ER wait times in Ontario Toronto hospitals at the time employed a system of triage to ensure life-threatening injuries receive rapid treatment. After initial screening initial assessments by physicians were completed within the waiting rooms themselves for greater efficiency within a median of 1.2 hours Tests consultations and initial treatments were also provided within waiting rooms 50% of patients waited 4 hours before being transferred from the emergency room to another room the least-urgent 10% of cases wait over 12 hours the extended waiting-room times experienced by some patients were attributed to an overall shortage of acute care beds Toronto's MaRS Discovery District is a centre for research in biomedicine Toronto's Discovery District is a centre of research in biomedicine It is on a 2.5-square-kilometre (620-acre) research park that is integrated into Toronto's downtown core It is also home to the Medical and Related Sciences Centre (MaRS), which was created in 2000 to capitalize on the research and innovation strength of the Province of Ontario Another institute is the McLaughlin Centre for Molecular Medicine (MCMM) Specialized hospitals are also outside of the downtown core These hospitals include the Baycrest Health Sciences geriatric hospital and the Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital for children with disabilities Toronto is also host to a wide variety of health-focused non-profit organizations that work to address specific illnesses for Toronto Ontario and Canadian residents Organizations include Crohn's and Colitis Canada the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada the Canadian Cancer Society the Alzheimer Society of Canada Alzheimer Society of Ontario and Alzheimer Society of Toronto all situated in the same office at Yonge and Eglinton the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society of Canada the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research Cystic Fibrosis Canada the Canadian Mental Health Association the ALS Society of Canada and many others These organizations work to help people within the GTA Ontario or Canada who are affected by these illnesses as well most engage in fundraising to promote research services and public awareness Transportation, In addition to snowstorms ice storms windstorms heavy rainfall events associated with tropical storms or very severe thunderstorms Tornadoes are rare but do occur Tornado warnings have been posted for the city on a few occasions in the early 21st century however no touchdowns have been confirmed in the city since a weak tornado hit Scarborough in the mid-1990s a pair of dangerous F2 tornados did touchdown in neighbouring Vaughan on August 20 during the 2009 tornado season Further information: Effects of Hurricane Hazel in Canada. Player Season Susan McDade (Denmark) for Bureau of Management; 5 Economy Ontario's official language is English although there exists a number of French-speaking communities across Ontario. French-language services are made available for communities with a sizeable French-speaking population; a service that is ensured under the French Language Services Act of 1989 Territorial evolution. Osenego 2 Team culture 1.2 The Toronto Public School Board, The Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga is the GTA's primary airport and ranks among the world's busiest airports The main airport serving the GTA is Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga which is Canada's largest and busiest airport it processed over 47 million passengers in 2017 and nearly 50 million passengers in 2018. Toronto Pearson International Airport is operated by the Greater Toronto Airports Authority (GTAA) and could potentially be asked to help observe in the operations of the other airports in the area but has yet to be asked to do so. John C Munro Hamilton International Airport in nearby Hamilton also handles international flights handles some discount flights and charters and acts as an alternate to Pearson the Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport on the Toronto Islands near downtown is used for civil aviation air ambulance traffic and regional scheduled airlines (it handled nearly two million passengers in 2012). YTO is a multiple airport code for Pearson Billy Bishop and Buttonville Municipal Airport (in Markham) There are also a number of smaller airports scattered throughout the GTA The Greater Toronto Airport Authority has also placed a tentative proposal to develop a new airport in Pickering (which also extends over into Markham and Uxbridge). As the GTAA predicts Toronto Pearson would be unable to be the sole provider for the bulk of Toronto's commercial air traffic in the next 20 years from the report's publication in 2004 (i.e in 2024) they believe a new airport in Pickering would address the need for a regional/reliever airport east of Toronto Pearson as well as complement the airport in Hamilton Ontario the GTAA also stated the new airport would create more opportunities for economic development in the eastern region of the Greater Toronto Area Communication. 2019 TBD Round of 16 Toronto is Canada's largest media market and has four conventional dailies two alt-weeklies and three free commuter papers in a greater metropolitan area of about 6 million inhabitants the Toronto Star and the Toronto Sun are the prominent daily city newspapers while national dailies the Globe and Mail and the National Post are also headquartered in the city the Toronto Star the Globe and Mail and National Post are broadsheet newspapers StarMetro is distributed as free commuter newspapers Several magazines and local newspapers cover Toronto including Now and Toronto Life while numerous magazines are produced in Toronto such as Canadian Business Chatelaine Flare and Maclean's Daily Hive Western Canada's largest online-only publication opened their Toronto office in 2016. Toronto contains the headquarters of the major English-language Canadian television networks CBC CTV Citytv Global the Sports Network (TSN) and Sportsnet Much (formerly MuchMusic) M3 (formerly MuchMore) and MTV Canada are the main music television channels based in the city though they no longer primarily show music videos as a result of channel drift Tourism. Map of Toronto with major traffic routes Also shown are the boundaries of six former municipalities which form the current City of Toronto, First Nations dispossession and reserves ? Toronto is home to a number of post-secondary institutions including colleges and universities Universities.
. 81 2617, Schooling for children living in poverty was a concern of many of the Chief Inspectors of the TPSB including Inspector Hughes He and others campaigned for the passage of legislation to allow for the creation of industrial schools similar to those created in England in the meantime a class for expelled students was created in a church mission run by the Anglican Grace Church the space was provided for free by the church and the class was staffed by the TPSB who provided Esther Frances How who would go on to be widely remembered for her work at the school. Although the Ontario Industrial Schools Act was passed in 1874 industrial schools were not built in Toronto until 1887 when the province provided funding to support the construction of such schools the first two industrial schools in Toronto were the Victoria Industrial School for Boys and the Alexandra School for Girls the schools were both part of the Industrial Schools Association of Toronto Victoria Industrial School for Boys, U.S News & World Report Global 816. North Toronto: Evans Gang King Gang Wunkies Ontario's rivers make it rich in hydroelectric energy in 2009 Ontario Power Generation generated 70 percent of the province's electricity of which 51 percent is nuclear 39% is hydroelectric and 10% is fossil-fuel derived by 2025 nuclear power is projected to supply 42% while fossil-fuel-derived generation is projected to decrease slightly over the next 20 years. Much of the newer power generation coming online in the last few years is natural gas or combined-cycle natural gas plants OPG is not however responsible for the transmission of power which is under the control of Hydro One The Pickering Nuclear Generating Station is one of three nuclear power stations in Ontario Despite its diverse range of power options problems related to increasing consumption lack of energy efficiency and aging nuclear reactors Ontario has been forced in recent years to purchase power from its neighbours Quebec and Michigan to supplement its power needs during peak consumption periods Ontario's basic domestic rate in 2010 was 11.17 cents per kWh; by contrast Quebec's was 6.81 in December 2013 the government projected a 42 percent hike by 2018 and 68 percent by 2033. Industrial rates are projected to rise by 33% by 2018 and 55% in 2033 The Green Energy and Green Economy Act 2009 (GEA) takes a two-pronged approach to commercializing renewable energy; first it aims to bring more renewable energy sources to the province; and secondly it aims to adopt more energy-efficiency measures to help conserve energy the bill envisaged appointing a Renewable Energy Facilitator to provide "one-window" assistance and support to project developers to facilitate project approvals The approvals process for transmission projects would also be streamlined and (for the first time in Ontario) the bill would enact standards for renewable energy projects Homeowners would have access to incentives to develop small-scale renewables such as low- or no-interest loans to finance the capital cost of renewable energy generating facilities like solar panels The Sir Adam Beck Hydroelectric Generating Stations is a hydroelectric plant located in Niagara Falls Ontario is home to Niagara Falls which supplies a large amount of electricity to the province the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station the largest operational nuclear power plant in the world is also in Ontario and uses 8 CANDU reactors to generate electricity for the province Ontario had the most wind energy capacity of the country with 4,900 MW of power (41% of Canada capacity) Government law and politics. . .
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