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Page 63 - உள்ளூர் பத்திரிகை முயற்சி நிருபர் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Centre Wellington to develop workplace mental health strategy for its employees

Centre Wellington to develop workplace mental health strategy for its employees The Canadian Press 2020-12-16 CENTRE WELLINGTON – The Township of Centre Wellington is developing a workplace mental health strategy for their staff to address a nationwide health and financial problem. Councillor Neil Dunsmore, who is noted for his work on mental health awareness, presented a motion to develop a strategy that would see the township promote a psychologically safe workplace.  Dunsmore explained that a psychologically safe workplace means a place free of harm, bullying, harassment and unreasonable work demands among other  “It is at the very core not about mental health but about mental distress which if allowed to go on and on will spiral down into a mental health issue,” Dunsmore said. 

Wearable art! Jasper artist transforms creations into clothing – Jasper s source for news, sports, arts, culture, and more

Wearable art! Jasper artist transforms creations into clothing Posted by: fitzhugh Posted date: December 15, 2020 In: Louise Hayes wears her artwork. One of her fabric art creations on display at the Jasper Art Gallery in 2019 caught the eye of someone from LeGaleriste, a wearable art company in Montreal. That started the ball rolling and today Hayes’ artwork is on clothing and household accessories.  | Supplied photo Joanne McQuarrie, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter | Artist Louise Hayes wasn’t expecting clothing and household accessories to be the canvas for the fabric art she creates.  But when she took part in The Buzz exhibition at Jasper Art Gallery (JAG) in January 2019, a visitor from Montreal with LeGaleriste, a wearable art company, photographed one of the four works of art she had on display and emailed it to her in February. 

Scotiabank becomes fifth major Canadian bank to refuse to fund oil drilling in Arctic refuge

Scotiabank becomes fifth major Canadian bank to refuse to fund oil drilling in Arctic refuge SYNDICATED 4 months ago Scotiabank is the fifth bank in Canada to publicly refuse to bankroll industrial development in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the institution announced in a new policy released Monday. “Scotiabank will not provide direct financing or project-specific financial and advisory services for activities that are directly related to the exploration, development or production of oil and gas within the Arctic Circle, including the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,” the bank said in a statement. Scotiabank joins the rest of Canada’s major financial institutions, including Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), Toronto Dominion (TD), Bank of Montreal (BMO) and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC), in vowing not finance development in a roughly 1.6 million-acre oil-rich parcel of the refuge known as the coastal plain.  The largest national wildlife refuge in the U

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