sugy Florida woman finds iguana in toilet bowl, calls 911

1 post / 0 new
MethrenFew
sugy Florida woman finds iguana in toilet bowl, calls 911

Xmxa Rescue dog found after escape at airport
A GO Transit train operator has tested positive for the COVID-19 virus.In a message sent to stanley mugg employees Friday, Ian Smith, the chief operating officer for Metrolinx, the provincial transit agency that oversees GO, said the operator was resting at home and doing stanley cup price well.Smith said Metrolinx was informed of the positive test by Bombardier, whose employees operate and maintain GO trains under contract to the provincial agency. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW According to Metrolinx, the employee hadnt been to work since March 20 and had gone into self-quarantine when the person began to feel unwell. The operator worked on GOs Kitchener and Lakeshore corridors, but Smiths message said train drivers work in isolation and have very limited contact with most staff and our customers. We are informing all of our people, as a sensible matter of precaution and for information, Smith said. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The locomotives and work areas that the operator was in contact with were given additional deep cleaning after the employe stanley bottles e reported the test results.Toronto-area transit workers are still on the job during the COVID crisis that has paralyzed much of the city. In the past week and a half, a TTC mechanic and subway operator have tested positive for the disease. Xhhl Company turns sod on new Cambridge venture
Every week, Lisa Svadjian and her husband lug plastic jugs of water into their renovated century home in Hamilton sought-after St. Clair neighbourhood.The family drinks bottled water since a city worker told them a couple of years ago that the pipe leading to their house is made of lead.The revelation irritated Svadjian. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW It like we ;re camping, she remembered thinking. This is ridiculous, to have to drink from bottled jugs of water, as if you don ;t have fresh water coming through your house.The Svadjians live in one of about 20,000 Hamilton homes with toxic lead pipes carrying water to their taps. They know kids are especially vulnerable to lead, but don ;t know the exact level of risk for their four- and six- stanley cup year-old girls. Instead of saving up thousands of dollars to hire a contractor to dig up and replace their pipes, they ;ve focused on other priorities with fixing up their old house. In the meantime, they drink bottled stanley quencher water, which they admit is a hassle and a waste as the four-litre jugs pile up in their recycling bins every week. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Hamilton officials acknowledge the health dangers of drinking water from lead pipes but say overhauling the system will take u stanley becher p to 40 years. Like their counterparts in other Canadian cities, they urge homeowners with lead pipes to spend thous