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TORONTO ?No one sang O Canada at the Remembrance D [url=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz]stanley nz[/url] ay ceremony outside Toronto Old City Hall on Wednesday.Instead, a small crowd quietly listened as a lone bugler played the national anthem.The event was closed to the public but bystanders ?most of them wearing masks ?nonetheless gathered as city officials laid wreaths and paid respects to the country veterans. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Aretha Phillip, the master of ceremonies, asked those in attendance to respect the city COVID-19 restrictions, including keeping two metres away from each other, and requested they not sing during O Canada or God Save the Queen.Mayor John Tory noted that Toronto had been marking Remembrance Day at the cenotaph outside Old City Hall for a century, a tradition that began during another pandemic. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW They gathered here 100 years ago on this day, two years after the First World War ended and as the Spanish flu epidemic was coming to an end, Tory said. This year, despite the COVID-19 pandemic, we have ensured that the chain of remembrance, the 100-year chain of remembrance, is not broken.The mayor, representatives of Canada [url=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk]stanley travel mug[/url] armed forces, veterans, and other dignitaries sat in a semicircle around the cenotaph ?each chair two metres fr [url=https://www.stanley-cups.com.es]stanley cup[/url] om the next ?before laying their wreaths at the monument. A member of the city staff swi Jcym Ontario s anti-human trafficking Bill 251 a win for some, a violation for others: advocates
Before COVID-19, Ana Stephenson seldom took a break during the work day. Now, she steps away from her computer for a swim and picnic lunch on a boat with her husband and daughter.Stephenson was already working from her 2,200-sq.-ft. Oakville hom [url=https://www.stanley-cups.es]vaso stanley[/url] e 70 per cent of the time before her tech company employer closed its offices.But with daughter Addison, 9, missing her [url=https://www.stanleycup.lt]stanley puodelis[/url] activities and playmates and husband, Rob, now also free of the office, the family moved to the Haliburton cottage they bought last Septe [url=https://www.stanleycup.cz]stanley termohrnek[/url] mber. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Now Rob is looking for a job in the area and, if theres no school in the fall, they expect to winterize their cottage plumbing and downsize to the 550-sq.-ft. lakefront home permanently. Its not that Im up here looking for a way to not work. Even if I won the lottery I would want to work. Thats how much I love my job, said Stephenson. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Its having that balance. Im still able to enjoy this part of my life and have this downtime. The Stephensons are part of a perceived wave of urbanites heading out of the city. Freed from the constraints and commutes of office working, worn down by the close confines and high prices of Toronto, they are fleeing to points further afield. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW While there are no statistics to measure the outflux, real-estate agents in and outside of Toronto