christiesplits
Senior Member
A rare win for the NDP, and a surprising rebuke to the PC party whip:
Also remember that Ford has touted "Job Creation" as an aptitude of his administration. If you flaunt having some immense power to "create jobs", you should at the very, very least, provide the supports needed to keep businesses afloat so no jobs are lost permanently because of a once-in-a-lifetime occurrence. But, let's be fair, it's a lousy metric to begin with.Remember all this crap when it comes time to vote in 2022.
I haven't seen any great evidence that points to retail as being a significant cause of spread, although I can understand the concern of having a large number of people indoors in a confined space with less than perfect ventilation.
Back in March, Costco did a great job of managing capacity and traffic flow. They could do it again. I can’t speak to WalMart as I don’t shop there.
Also remember that Ford has touted "Job Creation" as an aptitude of his administration. If you flaunt having some immense power to "create jobs", you should at the very, very least, provide the supports needed to keep businesses afloat so no jobs are lost permanently because of a once-in-a-lifetime occurrence. But, let's be fair, it's a lousy metric to begin with.
Speaking of lousy metrics, where's BurlOak gone to?
The Premier said that he was told by the big box operators that partitioning would be a logistical nightmare. Sounds like a 'them' problem to me.
It's not. Just keep it simple. Food, Hardware and Cleaning supplies and anything else is off limits.
If a cashier can't tell the difference between a TV, pair jeans and essential items like food and lysol they need to be retrained.
We're clearly discriminating against those who lead a gastronomically-alternative lifestyle!
Gives new meaning to the phrase "eat your pants". Anyways, there is a simpler solution than asking the cashier to decide - make retailers void non-grocery items in their database and making them untransactable.
AoD