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Wabano Centre accused of mishandling funds, workplace harassment
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Posted: May 11, 2021 5:57 PM ET | Last Updated: May 11
Urban Indigenous people in Ontario will be able to receive their second dose of COVID-19 vaccine three to four weeks after their initial dose, the province announced Monday.(Francis Ferland/CBC)
Indigenous people in Ontario living in urban areas will be able to receive their second dose of COVID-19 vaccine within the three- to four-week interval recommended by manufacturers, the province announced Monday. If you are First Nations, Inuit or Metis, you should have priority no matter where you live, said Jennifer David, who is a member of Chapleau Cree First Nation in northern Ontario, but lives in Ottawa.
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Ontario is expecting a flood of vaccines that will allow the province to boost the number of vaccinations against COVID-19.
As of Friday, residents 55 and over will qualify to book vaccination appointments. Here’s how:
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Try refreshing your browser, or Born in 1966 or earlier? You can book a vaccine appointment starting Friday Back to video
• An appointment is necessary at a community clinic. Visit Ontario.ca/bookvaccine to access the provincial booking system or call the provincial vaccine booking line at 1-833-943-3900 between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. seven days a week.
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While the provincial government announced that Ottawa residents born in 1971 and earlier and living in three postal codes will be able to book COVID-19 vaccinations, city hall warned that spots at community clinics will fill up fast.
The provincially-designated “hot spots” include postal codes starting with K1T, K1V and K2V.
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Try refreshing your browser, or COVID-19 vaccine appointments for 50-plus in hot spots will fill up fast, city hall warns Back to video
“There is not enough vaccine supply to allow everyone aged 50 and older who live in these high-priority neighbourhoods to book an appointment in the provincial booking system today,” the City of Ottawa said in a release Friday.
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