This is what you can do when you re done with black food delivery containers in Toronto
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Many of us in Toronto try to wash and reuse those black food delivery containers when we re done with them, but after a year of ordering meals, they can start to pile up. Instead of just ditching them, you can actually donate your clutter to a good cause.
Toronto s Food Not Bombs has actually been collecting and reusing cleaned food delivery containers since 2017, partnering with Allan Gardens Food and Clothing Share to serve nutritious vegan food to often over 150 people in a day, many of them unhoused.
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They thought they d be near the front of the line for the vaccine. Now, they don t know where they stand.
Theresa Vargas, The Washington Post
Feb. 13, 2021
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Anna Landre, who s on the Advisory Neighborhood Commission for the Georgetown area, is a student at Georgetown University.Washington Post photo by Theresa Vargas.
WASHINGTON - The one reassurance that came in the 42 days Lauren Cooper watched her 17-year-old daughter, Molly, lay in a hospital bed, fighting pneumonia, was that the nurses around her were getting their first doses of the coronavirus vaccine.
Finally, the shot was available in D.C., she thought. Finally, her daughter, who has chronic lung disease and a neurological disorder, might soon have some defense against a virus that is much more likely to kill her than others her age.