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The 608-bed hospital [1] was designed by Parkin Architects Limited in joint venture with Adamson Associates and built by a joint venture of Carillion and EllisDon. [2] The Brampton Civic Hospital is one of Canada's first public hospitals to be designed, built, financed, and maintained under a private-public partnership.
Brampton, Ontario: Jurisdiction: Regional municipality: Employees: Almost 700 full- and part-time paramedics work for Peel Regional Paramedic Services. Ambulances: 60 ambulances and 8 Rapid Response Units: Chief: Peter Dundas, Director of Peel Regional Paramedic Services: Medical director: Dr. Sheldon Cheskes: Responses: Responds to over ...
Peel Memorial Hospital (PMH) was a 367-bed acute care hospital located in central Brampton, Ontario. PMH was founded in 1925 and became a part of the William Osler Health Centre in 1998. It previously served approximately 400,000 residents in Brampton and the surrounding areas.
Until the 2004 contract most GPs provided care for their patients outside those hours either themselves, or as part of a GP Co-operative. [7] The total amount earmarked for Out of Hours duties including Night Visit Fees was an average of just under £6000 per GP per year. [8]
The paper soon began running two front pages, one with a Bramalea-oriented lead story, the other with a Brampton-based story; the title of the publication became The Brampton/Bramalea Guardian. [4] When the Telegram closed, Douglas Bassett sold the Guardian to the Inland Publishing chain, owned by The Toronto Star.
Bramalea Terminal [2] is a Brampton Transit bus station serving the community of Bramalea in Brampton, Ontario, Canada.It is located at the south west corner of Peel Centre Drive and Central Park Drive on the north side of the Brampton Civic Centre.
Brampton's Old Fire Hall, built in 1854 at 2 Chapel Street, was originally a market hall. The second floor "long room" was being used by the village council chambers by 1860. The first meeting of Brampton Town Council took place here in 1874. Council meetings were held here until 1911. [9]
The Peel Regional Police (PRP) provides policing services for Peel Region (excluding Caledon) in Ontario, Canada.It is the second largest municipal police service in the Greater Toronto Area in Ontario, and the third largest municipal force behind the Toronto Police Service, with 2,200 uniformed members and close to 875 support staff.