20211209
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20211208
Wisdom Wednesday Community News: My Soulmate is my Ex This is just so Silly but in life the things that is happening that no one may know the universe might just see something you been avoiding this is making me Laugh This is why I need to Write My Book "Tea Spiller" Tell me your secrets, I'm not messy
20211207
Community News: WorkSafeBC is investigating the deaths of two people after being trapped under glass sheets in Richmond in mid-October.
WorkSafeBC is investigating the deaths of two people after being trapped under glass sheets in Richmond in mid-October.
Emergency personnel were called to the scene Oct. 12 around 9 a.m. in the 16000-block of River Road, close to No. 7 Road.
Richmond Fire-Rescue – who included the information in their monthly report to city council – arrived at the scene and determined the two workers had died. Soon thereafter, they were joined by paramedics who confirmed the deaths.
Richmond Fire-Rescue crew members helped remove the glass off the two bodies using airbags.
WorkSafeBC and the RCMP Special Crimes Unit also were on scene.
According to WorkSafeBC, the two people who died were employees, but they didn’t say who they were working for at the time of the incident.
WorkSafeBC said the primary purpose of their investigation is to determine the cause of the incident as well as any contributing factors, “so that similar incidents can be prevented from happening in the future.”
Community News: Richmond Hospital nurses quitting due to overwork, stress “We know that nurses are quitting at Richmond General Hospital due to overwork, stress and the lack of nursing staff available to help with the workload,” said Grewal.
Richmond Hospital nurses quitting due to overwork, stress
Overworked and lack of staff are only two of many reasons some nurses are quitting Richmond Hospital, according to Aman Grewal, president of the BC Nurses Union.
Grewal said a nursing crisis has been going on for decades and the pandemic has only highlighted that fact.
“We know that nurses are quitting at Richmond General Hospital due to overwork, stress and the lack of nursing staff available to help with the workload,” said Grewal.
“Our nurses are tired everywhere. We hear it locally, on the Island and in the Interior.”
According to a recent survey conducted for the union, 35 per cent of B.C. nurses surveyed said they are considering leaving the profession in the next two years due to the pandemic.
Grewal said the lack of staff in the ER and in various departments has resulted in nurses being redeployed throughout the hospital.
She explained that nurses are continuously being moved around from their original units to another unit where there is a need for more staff, which adds to the mental exhaustion nurses face.
“This is happening everywhere. Nurses are taken from one area to better support one area in dire situations.”
The high number of deaths nurses have to see, especially in ER, is also contributing to their mental exhaustion and burnout, said Grewal.
“(Prior to COVID-19) you may see one death every couple weeks, but now at times you could be seeing several in one shift,” she added.
As well, the lack of staff resources and heavy workload may potentially also cause physical injury to nurses, such as sprains or strains while working without sufficient rest.
Finally, the lack of resources is impacting patient care, said Grewal.
Pre-pandemic, one nurse would attend to four patients on average. Now, nurses are attending up to six or seven patients.
“This limits the time nurses can spend with their patients in order for them to get to everyone, and we can’t provide the best care for patients (this) way,” said Grewal.
In order for staffing needs to be met, the provincial government projected that B.C. needs close to 24,000 nurses in healthcare by 2029.
BCNU is calling on the government for a comprehensive plan to recruit nurses now and for the future, while developing strategies to retain those already in the profession.
Community News: More than 120 staff at Maplehurst Correctional Complex in Milton have been placed on leave after Halton Public Health banned unvaccinated staff from working at the jail last week amid a COVID-19 outbreak, according to a union memo obtained by the Star.
More than 120 staff at Maplehurst Correctional Complex in Milton have been placed on leave after Halton Public Health banned unvaccinated staff from working at the jail last week amid a COVID-19 outbreak, according to a union memo obtained by the Star.
The combination of outbreak control measures and staffing shortages is raising concerns for both inmates and staff at the jail, which has seen frequent lockdowns through the pandemic particularly during an outbreak at the start of the year that spread through 250 inmates and 100 staff members.
There are 80 cases linked to the current outbreak, according to Halton Public Health. As of Dec. 1, according to the Ministry of the Solicitor General, there were 36 active inmate cases.
The majority of the unvaccinated staff, including correctional officers, were placed on unpaid leave as of Dec. 1 due to a public health order issued by local officials, outraging union leadership who say staff had been following Ontario Public Service rules. Those rules had allowed unvaccinated workers to submit to regular antigen testing as an alternative to vaccination.
The weekend memo from OPSEU Local 234 president Peter Figliola says 124 staff members working at Maplehurst are affected by the new requirement, including 16 people assigned to a unit housing inmates from the Ontario Correctional Institute which closed down after a major outbreak last year. As of 2019, the jail employed 440 correctional officers. The local represented 1,078 members from Maplehurst and the neighbouring women’s jail.
“The focus of this isn’t about who is vaccinated and who isn’t, the focus of this is these individuals were in compliance with an OPS mandate and they were punished for it,” Figliola said an in an interview. The public health order does not stipulate that unvaccinated staff should be placed on unpaid leave.
Figliola said staff who are able to work at the jail are doing their best and working 12 to 14 hours days and through breaks in order to keep the facility operating, as other staff members are facing an unknown amount of time without pay.
“I feel like we are being used as a test run to see what the reaction is for the rest of the province,” he said. He noted that proof of vaccination or testing is not a requirement for visitors to provincial jails and said the union had been asking for this to be addressed for weeks.
Community News Cyber Attacks A 31-year-old man from Ottawa is facing charges after a multi-year cross-border investigation into cyber attacks against governments, businesses and individuals in the United States and Canada.
A 31-year-old man from Ottawa is facing charges after a multi-year cross-border investigation into cyber attacks against governments, businesses and individuals in the United States and Canada.
https://globalnews.ca/news/8431601/ottawa-cyber-crime-opp-rcmp-fbi-malware-ransomware/
The Ontario Provincial Police joint press conference with members of the RCMP and the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation’s attaché in Ottawa on Tuesday to unveil the results of Project CODA, which investigated recent spikes in cybercrime.
The FBI first got into contact with the OPP in January 2020 to alert the provincial force about ransomware and malware attacks originating in Canada.
OPP and the Mounties conducted a “separate, parallel investigation” alongside the FBI, based on the U.S. intelligence agency’s tips, with help from Europol.
Officials did not provide specifics on the volume or specific targets of attacks under investigation. However, they stated the attacks were “numerous” and included businesses, government agencies and individuals on both sides of the border.
OPP Dep. Insp. Matt Watson said the cyberattacks could be described as “malspam,” wherein victims are sent unsolicited emails with “infected attachments.” When opened, these attachments would enable access to the computer’s system, monitoring activity, collecting login credentials and initiating unauthorized online banking transactions.
In one 2018 incident, the State of Alaska was targeted, according to the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice.
Matthew Philbert, arrested by OPP on Nov. 30, is facing a series of Criminal Code charges in connection with the investigation, including possession of a device to obtain unauthorized use of a computer system or to commit mischief, fraud, and unauthorized use of a computer.
During the arrest, OPP said they seized several computers, tablets, cellphones, a Bitcoin seed phrase and blank cards with magnetic stripes.
Community News: School bus driver crashed into trees and died Norfolk County
Ontario Provincial Police say a school bus driver is dead after the bus they were driving, which was empty at the time, left a roadway, entered and ditch and collided with trees.
OPP say the crash occurred at roughly 4 p.m. Monday on Norfolk County Road 23, South Walsingham, northwest of Long Point, Ont.
The driver, 49-year-old Kari-Anne Michelle Wills of Norfolk County, was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries but was later pronounced dead.
The OPP’s west region traffic incident team is still investigating, Acting Sgt. Ed Sanchuk said.
“We are attempting to put the pieces of the puzzle back together to determine exactly what transpired here,” Sanchuk said.
Community News: Three pedestrians rushed to hospital incident occurred near Bathurst and Ulster streets downtown Toronto
Published Tuesday, December 7, 2021 7:05PM EST
At least three people were taken to hospital with serious injuries after being struck by vehicles in separate incidents around he GTA over a short span of time Tuesday evening.
The latest incident occurred near Bathurst and Ulster streets in the Palmerston area downtown.
At around 7:30 p.m., Toronto police said they were assisting paramedics with an emergency run after a pedestrian was struck.
Toronto Paramedic Services said a teenage girl was taken to hospital with serious, possibly life-threatening injuries.
Bathurst Street has been closed between Harbord and College streets as police investigate.
Shortly before 7 p.m., Toronto police said they were responding to the intersection of Lansdowne Avenue and Dundas Street West for another incident in Toronto’s Little Portugal.
Police said a female pedestrian had sustained serious injuries and was taken to hospital by Toronto Paramedic Services.
All westbound lanes of Dundas Street West were closed at St Clarens Avenue as police investigated, but have since reopened.
Also just before 7 p.m., Peel Regional Police said they were responding after a male pedestrian was struck by a vehicle at Airport and Coventry roads in Brampton.
Peel Regional Paramedic Services said they transported an adult male to a trauma centre in serious condition.
Few details have been released so far about the exact circumstances around each incident.
Culture can be understood as a set of common beliefs that hold people together. (Example, Waste Man Doesn't Mean Waste Management 3:11 ) I started with Stuart Hall Jamaican-born British Marxist Sociologist, Cultural Theorist, and Political Activist theory on Representation Vs Re-Representation.
LB Spiffy, 17 Duvy, Pressa, WhyG, NHS JayJay, Robin Banks My Favorite Six from the SixLB Spiffy, 17 Duvy, Pressa, WhyG, NHS JayJay, Robin Banks My Favorite Six from the Six Culture can be understood as a set of common beliefs that hold people together. (Example, Waste Man Doesn't Mean Waste Management 3:11 )I started with Stuart Hall Jamaican-born British Marxist Sociologist, Cultural Theorist, and Political Activist theory on Representation Vs Re-Representation. #teatalktoronto #sipandspilldatea #janeandfinch
LB Spiffy, 17 Duvy, Pressa, WhyG, NHS JayJay, Robin Banks My Favorite Six from the Six
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