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Canadian Science Centre for Human and Animal Health; Montreal Centre for International Studies; Centre de Recherches Mathématiques; Centre for Forest Research; Centre for Medieval Studies, Toronto; Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation, and Rhetoric; Centre for Research on Educational and Community Services; Centre justice et foi
In April 2022, 73 centres were operating, said to be providing 30,000 additional tests a week, and the aspiration was to have 160 CDCs up and running by 2025. This was actually an average of only 411 tests per week per centre. Shortages of qualified staff impacted on the programme. [3]
Okotoks (/ ˈ oʊ k ə t oʊ k s / OH-kə-tohks, originally / ˈ ɒ k ə t ɒ k s / OK-ə-toks) is a town in the Calgary Region of Alberta, Canada. It is on the Sheep River, approximately 38 km (24 mi) south of Downtown Calgary. Okotoks has emerged as a bedroom community of Calgary. [10]
As part of its stewardship of resources pillar, the jurisdiction has become a national leader in designing and constructing "green" school facilities. Most recently (2008), the newly constructed Holy Trinity Academy (Okotoks, Alberta, Canada) was built to LEED Gold standards; the first high school to receive this prestigious recognition in Canada.
They provide distress and safety communications, vessel traffic services and marine weather information. "The Canadian Coast Guard announced in May of 2012 that they would be reducing the number of MCTS Centres across Canada from 22 to the present 12 centres in an effort to reduce the Coast Guard operating budget." [1] [2]
The Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services Act (French: Loi sur l’assurance-hospitalisation et les services diagnostiques, [1] HIDS) is a statute passed by the Parliament of Canada in 1957 that reimbursed one-half of provincial and territorial costs for hospital and diagnostic services administered under provincial and territorial health insurance programs.
The Drake Landing Solar Community (DLSC) is a planned community in Okotoks, Alberta, Canada, equipped with a central solar heating system and other energy efficient technologies. This heating system is the first of its kind in North America, although much larger systems have been built in northern Europe.
Okotoks Erratic (also known as either Big Rock or, in Blackfoot, as Okotok) is a 16,500-tonne (18,200-ton) boulder that lies on the otherwise flat, relatively featureless, surface of the Canadian Prairies in Alberta.