Vaccines coming for Durham residents 80 and older oshawaexpress.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from oshawaexpress.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Stellantis plant in Windsor, Ontario
For over a century, Ontario has been a powerhouse in Canadian auto manufacturing. With an industry on the cusp on unprecedented change, is Canada positioned to continue to be a dominant force? Will we be able to ride the changing face of mobility to a new golden era of Canadian auto production?
In 2017, the Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid started rolling off the lines of FCA’s plant in Windsor, Ontario. The highly anticipated sibling to the gasoline-powered Pacifica, the hybrid announced the company’s Ontario foray into an electrified future. The birthplace of minivans as we know them since 1983, when we all finally learned what a “minivan” was, they’ve pumped out more than 15 million of them was going high-tech.
COVID-19 vaccination clinic opening in Oshawa
Posted on February 24, 2021 by oshawaexpress in COVID-19, HEALTH, NEWS
The COVID-19 vaccination clinic in Oshawa will be located at the Durham College and Ontario Tech University Campus Ice Centre.
COVID-19 vaccination clinics will be opening the first week of March in Durham Region, including one in Oshawa.
The clinics will be operating at Durham College (DC) and Ontario Tech University in Oshawa, and at Chestnut Hills Development Centre in Pickering.
Durham Region Health Department states these clinics will be used for priority populations in accordance with provincial guidelines. The clinics will not be open to the public at this time.
TORONTO Nearly a year after the first infection was found in the province, Ontario reached a significant milestone in the fight against COVID-19 on Dec. 14, 2020. On that date, the first dose of a vaccine against the novel coronavirus was administered in the province. Personal support worker Anita Qudangen’s shot was followed by applause as she sat in a chair inside a downtown Toronto hospital. Since then, amid substantial supply issues, more than 250,000 people in Ontario have been fully vaccinated against the disease. Now, as more doses become available and more needles go into arms across the province, many questions remain.
TORONTO The legacy of outgoing president Donald Trump is personal for Steve Nardi, who can no longer talk to his father about politics without it immediately escalating into a fight. âI lit a fuse over the phone when I said I was angry about the level of hate unbottled by Trump,â said the Mississauga, Ont. resident, who is originally from New Jersey and is now chair of Democrats Abroad Canada. âThe damage heâs done to families and friendships, itâs never been this way before. You used to disagree and then be able to move on.â Nardi is curious to know what his father, a decorated war veteran, thinks of the Jan. 6 attack by a mob of Trump supporters on the Capitol building as legislators were voting to confirm the election of Joe Biden.