Passenger Elevator get used to the tough lovePosted by beranter on February 14th, 2016 In the meantime,Passenger Elevator get used to the tough love.Art Eggleton’s new report on public housing in Toronto uses the word “non-profit” no fewer than 81 times.The task force led by the Liberal senator and former mayor sees non-profit housing providers as a model for Toronto Community Housing Corp., the city’s massive public-housing authority. Sit in on a board meeting for one of them, and it’s easy to see why. French doors from the living room and the dining room open to an enclosed porch, which provides an al fresco living and dining space from spring through fall, Ms. Belcourt says. The room is a great place for viewing owls and other birds in the trees outside, she says. In the autumn, it’s a place to relax amidst the changing leaves. “It’s almost like you’re in a cottage.”Far less understood is that PTSD afflicts all sorts of civilian workers – particularly firefighters, paramedics and police officers. While Canadian data is scarce, surveys conducted by researchers in the United States, Britain,. Australia and Brazil show that the rate of Elevator Factory among first responders ranges from 5 to 22 per cent, with paramedics reporting the highest levels, according to a 2012 article in the Journal of Workplace Health and Safety by B.C. nurse Cheryl Drewitz-Chesney. A 2009 study, conducted by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, found that as many as one in three police officers in the United States report at least partial PTSD symptoms. Like it? Share it!More by this author |