News   Jul 12, 2024
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Premier Doug Ford's Ontario


With school age children at home using laptops and computer keyboards because of COVID-19, maybe we should be teaching touch-typing?

Teaching kids to type

From link.

Educational technology can help children strengthen literacy skills, deal more easily with the challenges of learning difficulties, and enhance their performance across the elementary and high school curriculum.

And while apps typically make headlines for their big-data algorithms and adaptive lesson plans, one of the best Ed Tech ideas for children may be a more back-to-basics approach. For example, programs that teach keyboarding skills. That's because in order to use a computer, play educational games, and even search the web, it helps to have learned touch typing.

Being able to type without looking at the keyboard means kids can focus on the task in front of them, instead of getting distracted hunting for letters.

Learning to type using a multi-sensory approach also strengthens reading, writing and spelling skills by emphasizing phonics.

It prepares children for later grades, when assignments must be completed using a computer, and reinforces familiarity with Sight Words and other high frequency vocabulary.

When kids practice touch typing, they are using muscle memory to manipulate the keyboard.

This is a much more direct way of translating ideas into language, as thoughts flow freely through the fingertips and onto the screen.

Typing can help hone writing skills, make peer-editing and revision tasks easier and is also a great way for kids who struggle with dyslexia, dysgraphia and dyspraxia to complete written assignments and avoid the challenges of handwriting their school work.

When should children learn to type?​

Children today are exposed to keyboards from a very early age from family laptops to the keyboard screens of their parents’ tablets and smartphones. While typing is a skill that can be mastered at any age, the younger the better, as they will have more opportunities to refine and strengthen their skills.

They are also less at risk for developing bad typing habits that are hard to unlearn, such as the hunt-and-peck method.

It’s generally considered appropriate for kids to learn to type when their hands are big enough to fit comfortably on a standard keyboard, typically around 6 or 7 years of age. This also coincides with a period in which they are learning to read and write at school, and practicing their English spelling skills.
 
The reaction to the news of the rate decrease in my community Facebook group is "oh no, does this mean lockdowns are being extended"?
 
The reaction to the news of the rate decrease in my community Facebook group is "oh no, does this mean lockdowns are being extended"?
Sadly, it is a possibility, Ford and Company had 2 yrs to make a strategy, retrofit schools, study the benefits of lockdowns, LTC facilities and the list goes on. Whilst we can’t blame Covid and it’s variants on Ford, they have been totally inept in handling it.
 
The Ford government has announced that it will lower the cost of electricity to the current off-peak rate of 8.2 cents per kilowatt-hour for 21 days starting on Jan. 18.

Ontario to charge off-peak rates for electricity while province is in modified Step 2 of reopening plan


From link.

Ontarians who find themselves spending more time at home amid the latest provincial lockdown will at least get a break on their electricity bills.
The Ford government has announced that it will lower the cost of electricity to the current off-peak rate of 8.2 cents per kilowatt-hour for 21 days starting on Jan. 18.
It says that the reduced rate, which is less than half the cost of the current daytime rate - will be in effect 24 hours a day and will be applied automatically to residential accounts, as well as those belonging to small businesses and farms.
“We know that spending more time at home means using more electricity during the day when prices are higher, that’s why we are moving to off-peak electricity rates 24 hours per day, seven days a week,” Minister of Energy Todd Smith said in a press release. “The off-peak rate will provide immediate savings for families, small businesses and farms as all Ontarians work together to slow the spread of the Omicron variant.”
The Ontario government also lowered electricity rates to the off-peak rate during the second wave of the pandemic last winter but did not do so during the third wave of the pandemic in April.
The move to revive the practice comes with public school students learning remotely until at least Jan. 17 and a number of businesses, including gyms and theatres, ordered to close.
In addition to lower electricity rates for residents and small businesses, the province also announced on Friday that it would provide eligible small businesses subject to closure under Step two of its reopening plan with a grant of $10,000.
It said that any business that received funds from the Ontario Business Costs Rebate Program during earlier waves of the pandemic will not have to reapply ands can expect to receive funds in February should they qualify.
 
Ontario Minister of Education, Stephen Lecce, is responsible for day care. Figures, for this result...

Parents pull children out of Ontario daycares due to COVID-19 testing changes

From link.

Karen Aagaard wanted to send her daughter back to daycare this week but decided to keep her toddler home.

As COVID-19 cases soar and testing is limited to high-risk groups, which so far doesn’t include child-care centres, the pregnant Toronto mother and her husband are keeping their two-year-old out of daycare, for now.

“We really felt like we didn’t have a choice,” she said.

“With the numbers of COVID cases rising and the lack of safety measures in daycare, we just felt like the only way we could keep our daughter remotely safe, and even keeping her home isn’t a guarantee right now for safety, but it was the only thing that we could do.”

Aagaard is among a number of parents who are opting to keep their young kids – who aren’t yet eligible for vaccination – out of daycares.

Kara Pihlak, executive director of Oak Park Co-Operative Children’s Centre in London, Ont., said out of the 42 children who usually attend her centre, about 10 of them have been pulled out in recent days.

“Some of our parents are choosing to pull their children of child care because they’re obviously nervous about the COVID-19 virus, or they’re wanting to keep their children home as they have siblings in elementary school,” she said.

On Thursday, the Ontario government announced that it would accelerate booster doses for child-care and school staff, in addition to other safety measures like providing those staff with N95 masks and updating child-care screening measures.

It also said it’s working to make more rapid-antigen tests available “to support the ongoing operations of child-care centres, and schools when they return to in-person learning.”

Carolyn Ferns, public policy co-ordinator for the Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care, said while this is a step in the right direction, there is still more that needs to be done.


Her advocacy group and the Association of Early Childhood Educators Ontario are calling on the province to speed up the delivery of N95 masks to daycares, provide HEPA filters in every room, reinstate COVID-19 reporting of daycare cases and make PCR testing available to everyone in those settings again.

“The provincial government’s inaction on child care or their sort of disregard for the sector at this point is dangerous,” Ferns said.

“You can’t keep child care programs open face to face without doing everything you can to make them safe. And that means testing, reporting and adequate PPE.”

A spokeswoman for the Ministry of Health said the government updated its testing and isolation guidelines “to ensure those living and working in our highest-risk settings are protected and to maintain the stability of critical workforces, including frontline health care workers.”

Alexandra Hilkene added that as the situation around the Omicron variant “continues to evolve, we will continue to assess PCR eligibility on an ongoing basis in the context of capacity for specimen collection and lab processing.”

Amy O’Neil, director of Treetop Children’s Centre in Toronto, said her centre’s board of directors decided on Tuesday to close the daycare’s doors until in-person learning resumes at schools, or until it sees COVID-19 testing resumed for individuals in daycares.

“It was a principled decision, based on the fact that we felt that it was unsafe to continue to put the staff and children in a dangerous situation basically because we don’t have any access to rapid testing, we don’t have any access to PCR testing,” she said.

“So the board of directors just said, ‘You know what, this is not worth the risk or the liability of having potential outbreaks and having children and staff get sick. We were also worried about staff shortages.”

Even before this decision was made, O’Neil said some parents planned to pull their kids out of the daycare and the centre was already seeing staff shortages.

The Learning Enrichment Foundation, another child-care centre in Toronto, has also decided to keep its infant, toddler and preschool programs closed until Jan. 10 in light of the recent changes announced by the government and the current COVID-19 situation in Ontario.

“Given the significant changes with the new variant it seemed unsafe to open without a full picture of what is needed to protect our staff and families,” said Nicola Maguire, director of the centre, in a written statement.

“It seemed unwise and unsafe for us to be opening under old rules during this confusing transition.”

Ferns said she’s concerned that more centres will close, as many did in previous waves of the pandemic, due to lower enrolment and the ongoing risks associated with COVID-19. She said this is why the child-care sector is calling for the provincial government to provide emergency funding to child-care programs “to get them through this.”

“If the child-care program closes now, because of low enrolment, they’re not going to be there when we need them for social and economic recovery,” she added.

Ontario is the only province that hasn’t reached an agreement with the federal government to provide $10-per-day child care.

A spokeswoman did not make Education Minister Stephen Lecce available for an interview. In a written statement, she said, “Talks continue with the federal government on a deal for child care.”

As Aagaard continues to pay for her daughter’s spot at the daycare, with hopes to send her back some day soon, she said she and her husband are juggling working from home and taking care of their daughter, with her mother lending a hand as well. But she acknowledged not every parent can do the same.

“We recognize what a privilege all of this is, that we can continue paying for our spot, that we can take (our daughter) out, that we have flexibility from our respective employers and we have a little bit of help on the side,” Aagaard added.

“And it just boils down to the onus being completely on the parents because we’ve essentially been abandoned by the latest measures and protocols, or I should say lack thereof.”
 

Their mother died in agony in a nursing home. Now they’re demanding Ontario hire a long-term-care ombud

From link.

Judith Young’s sons want the province to create an independent oversight office with the investigative power to help families in situations like theirs get answers.​

The sons of 95-year-old Judith Young — who died in an Oakville nursing home with two broken femurs and no explanation — are calling on the Ontario government to hire a long-term-care ombud with the investigative power to demand answers from the system.

Without an independent oversight office, Dr. J.E.M. (James Edward Massey) Young and his brother, Terence Young, the former Oakville MP and MPP, said families will remain alone in their struggle for answers from nursing homes and the institutions that are supposed to oversee them.

“Most families,” said Dr. Young, “don’t have the time or resources to contact the coroner’s office, the police or the facility itself when something happens to a family member in long-term care. Our experience is an example of how very difficult it is to get answers or even information.”

The Young brothers have the bureaucratic and medical expertise to seek answers. And yet, they’ve been fighting for four years to find out how their mother — who could not move on her own — ended up with two identical fractures in each thigh bone at the Chartwell Waterford Long-Term Care Residence, when no one in the home reported an injury or a cry of pain.
An orthopedic surgeon and a radiologist who examined Judith’s X-rays at the behest of Dr. Young both told the Star she would have cried in pain after suffering twisting spiral fractures that are caused by a “significant rotational force” and not simply the weak bones of an older woman. Judith’s sons said their mother did not take any medication that would cause brittle bones.

Judith died on Nov. 9, 2017. Her sons believe that she was injured sometime between the evening of Friday, Nov. 3, and the following morning when day staff arrived. The Ministry of Long-Term Care inspector’s notes quote day workers saying they had no reports of a fall but said Judith screamed when they dressed her that morning. Staff said they continued dressing Judith and twice took her to the dining room. She did not eat.

Investigations by the nursing home, Halton Regional Police and the ministry found no wrongdoing.

The circumstances behind the death of Judith Knox Young, born into the Massey Harris/Ferguson empire of agricultural equipment and the philanthropic name behind Massey Hall, Massey College and the Massey Lectures, remain a mystery, although the Office of the Chief Coroner recently revised its original conclusion.

In September, its new report no longer called her death “natural.” Instead, it is now using its “undetermined” category for Judith’s death. The new report said “it seems probable that there was some force” on the left knee that likely caused Judith’s injury and called the manner of her death a “competition … between accident and natural.”

The ministry has said it will review the coroner’s latest findings to “determine next steps.”

Since the story of his mother’s death was published in the Star on Saturday, Terence said he has been taking calls from families sharing their struggle for information related to relatives’ injuries and deaths. The Star has also received numerous readers’ emails of unexplained injuries and deaths.

An independent Ontario ombud would be “very, very busy,” Terence said.

“If there was an ombudsperson with legal expertise, they could guide families on their options and write a report, or a series of reports, to put all of these issues on the public record,” he said.

Jane Meadus, a lawyer with the Advocacy Centre for the Elderly, said an ombud would only be effective if they had a strong investigative background and powers — otherwise it would likely end up as yet another bureaucratic exercise that leads nowhere.

Any push for an independent ombud should be combined with a “nursing home whisperer,” to help homes improve, said Dr. George Heckman, the Schlegel Research Chair of Geriatric Medicine at the Schlegel-University of Waterloo Research Institute for Aging.

“What I’ve been finding in long-term care is the approach tends to be punitive and then the reaction therefore tends to try to weasel out of some responsibility and blame others,” Heckman said, speaking about nursing homes generally. “It can go all the way to the top.”

“Yes, there are punishments meted out and compliance orders, but I don’t know if they ever get to the bottom of things,” Heckman said. “The independence of an ombud is good — but you also need the independence of the people to say, ‘Here is how we are going to fix your problem.’”

Until that time, families are on their own.

Terence offered recommendations for those unaccustomed to challenging authority. He suggests taking detailed and dated notes of issues as a written record for future reference. He also recommends requesting meetings with the home’s administrators, highlighting specific concerns and asking “how the home intends to deal with them.” Families should visit on different days at unexpected times. And, he said, the power of attorney could seek legal advice, if needed.

He knows that many families will struggle. “Most people are intimidated by authorities because they feel that they are going to get into trouble if they challenge them,” Terence said. “But you have to stand up to authorities. It’s not a matter of being angry — it’s a matter of being persistent.”

Few can afford the cost of a lawsuit, he noted. “They’re afraid if they go to a lawyer, they’re going to have to write a cheque for $20,000. Which they usually will. That’ll be gone. Then there will be a request for another cheque. You know, half of Canadians — and I remember this number from the 2019 election — have less than $200 left over at the end of every month. They can’t afford to write a cheque.”

But, he said, some lawyers will take a case on a contingency fee to be paid later — if there is a settlement. Meadus, of the Advocacy Centre for the Elderly, said she is seeing more lawyers take on these cases. “I think these problems are going to be fixed in the courts,” she said.
In 2019, the Young sons filed a lawsuit against Chartwell and four employees, alleging their mother suffered immensely because no one reported an injury, leaving her with inadequate pain medication until her broken femurs were X-rayed.

Chartwell’s statement of defence, filed on Dec. 16, said the nursing home provided excellent care and had nothing to do with Judith’s injury and death.

It said Judith was responsible, due to pre-existing “medical conditions or circumstances” that arose before or after the workers’ involvement and the “natural progression” of her medical condition. It blamed her sons, saying they failed to follow directions of health-care professionals, disclose relevant information and “seek medical attention on a timely basis or at all.” A Chartwell spokesperson cited the “compassion” of its employees and said the company “has every confidence in the justice system to get the right result.”

The Youngs took exception to the original coroner’s report which, Dr. Young said, made their mother sound like she was “old and going to die anyway.”

Dr. Samir Sinha calls it a “conspiracy of silence” created by “ageism and ableism.”

Older adults, especially those in their 90s, like Judith, are often looked upon as if their lives matter less because they don’t have decades of life left and are living with dementia, said Sinha, director of geriatrics for Sinai Health and the University Health Network.

“If this was a child-care facility for example, and this happened, would we have reacted in the same way? I think there would have been a fulsome investigation. Would we just have said, ‘Well nobody saw anything so we’re just giving up?’ Well, no. We would not.”

From link.
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Management & Directors​

Directors​

Michael D. Harris​

Chair of the Board​

Mr. Harris is a senior business advisor at Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP, a law firm. Mr. Harris was the Premier of the Province of Ontario from 1995 to 2002. He is a member of the Board of Directors of Canaccord Genuity Group Inc., Route1 Inc. (Chair) and Voxtur Analytics Corp., and is a former Director of Colliers International Group Inc. and Magna International Inc. (former Chair). He holds the ICD.D designation. Mr. Harris was appointed to the Order of Ontario in 2021...
Do we expect Doug Ford to do something that may upset his friend Michael D. Harris, former Premier of Ontario and now Chair of the Board for Chartwell Retirement Residences? It was Doug Ford who nominated and got the Order of Ontario for Mike Harris. See link.
 

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