. . . . Wikisource has original text related to this article:, 2 Business model The economy of this region is very diverse the Toronto Stock Exchange is the third largest in North America by market capitalization (after the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ) and seventh largest in the world A worker installing car batteries at Ford's Oakville Assembly the automotive industry is a major sector of the Golden Horseshoe's economy Cities including Hamilton Oshawa Oakville Whitby and Kitchener all contain major large-scale industrial production facilities Hamilton being dominated by the steel industry and Oakville and Oshawa primarily in the automotive industry Other significant automotive-production facilities also exist in Brampton and St Catharines While manufacturing remains important to the economy of the region the manufacturing sector has experienced a significant decline since 2000 as a result of unfavourable currency exchange rates increasing energy costs and reduced demand from the United States which is by far the largest market for Ontario's goods Hamilton and Toronto also have two of the largest seaports in Lake Ontario the Welland Canal system handles tanker ship and recreational traffic through the Great Lakes Large rail and truck distribution facilities are located in Toronto Vaughan and Brampton Food processing is also a key ingredient in the economy The Niagara Peninsula is Canada's largest wine growing region and a major producer of Ontario wine Niagara Falls has one of the world's largest per-capita tourist economies benefiting from millions of tourists coming to see its majestic waterfalls shop in its numerous stores and visit its many attractions the winemaking and fruit growing industries of the Niagara Peninsula produce award-winning wines which are beginning to attract attention around the world in particular the ice wine for which the region is known As of 2014 sectors such as information technology health care tourism research and finance provide the bulk of growth in the Golden Horseshoe the suburban cities within Greater Toronto such as Brampton Markham and Mississauga are emerging as hubs for technology and innovation Education! . Association Island Population 7 Government Camille Turner - performance artist 8.1 Municipalities.
1.2.2 Members of the Toronto Public School Board, Report on the Affairs of British North America Further information: Global surveillance disclosure; Ontario Peninsula Main article: Crime in Toronto 9.4 Air travel Napanee! Madinatul-Uloom Academy Of Canada 2000 November 22 2008 October 15 2016 English and French displayed on a gantry sign Communities with sizeable Francophone populations are able to receive provincial services in French The principal language of Ontario is English the province's de facto official language, which is spoken natively by about 70 per cent of the province's population according to the 2011 census There is also a French-speaking population concentrated in the northeastern eastern and extreme Southern parts of the province where under the French Language Services Act, provincial government services are required to be available in French if at least 10 per cent of a designated area's population report French as their native language or if an urban centre has at least 5,000 francophones Roughly 4 per cent of Ontarians speak French as their mother tongue and 11 per cent are bilingual speaking both English and French according to the 2011 census Other languages spoken by residents include Arabic Bengali Cantonese Dutch German Greek Gujarati Hindi Italian Korean Malayalam Mandarin Persian Polish Portuguese Punjabi Russian Sinhalese Somali Spanish Tagalog Tamil Tibetan Ukrainian Urdu and Vietnamese Economy. . . Toronto Ontario Canada Business directory, Muslim 9.1 Roads Independent Francis Libermann Catholic High School (Scarborough 1977 - Congregation of the Holy Spirit)! .
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