Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (CRCC, French: La Commission civile d’examen et de traitement des plaintes relatives à la GRC) is an independent agency. Created by Parliament in 1988, the Commission ensures that public complaints made about the conduct of RCMP members are examined fairly ...
Walmart Canada is a Canadian retail corporation, discount retailer and the Canadian subsidiary of the U.S.-based multinational retail conglomerate Walmart.Headquartered in Mississauga, Ontario, it was founded on March 17, 1994, with the purchase of the Woolco Canada chain from the F. W. Woolworth Company.
Stanley Steemer is an American company that provides carpet cleaning, tile and grout cleaning, upholstery cleaning, hardwood floor cleaning and air duct cleaning. The company also does water damage restoration and sells a line of cleaning products for home and office use. The company has over 280 corporate-owned and franchised locations in 49 ...
The complex features 9,900 parking spaces split between two four-story parking decks that together cover 2.8 million square feet (260,000 m 2), a 137,000-square-foot (12,700 m 2) customer service center, and a maintenance center featuring 140 gas pumps and 30 wash bays equipped with a water recovery system.
Decked Out is a Canadian home renovation television series, which airs on HGTV Canada since 2011. Hosted by Paul Lafrance, a contractor who owns Cutting Edge Construction and Design in Pickering, Ontario, [1] each episode depicts Lafrance and his team designing and building a unique and dramatic deck for a client.
Abel Wolman (June 10, 1892 – February 22, 1989) was an American engineer, educator and pioneer of modern sanitary engineering. His professional career left impacts in academia, sanitary engineering research, environmental and public health services, engineering professional societies, and journal publications. [ 1 ]
Leo Wolman (February 24, 1890 – October 2, 1961) was a noted American economist whose work focused on labor economics. He also served on a number of important boards and commissions for the federal government.
Wolman was born to an Orthodox Jewish family in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, [1] the son of a grocer. [2] He worked in the family business into his high school years, when his father had a stroke. Not graduating, Wolman joined the Merchant Marine, returned home, and moved to Washington, D.C. In the 1950s, he began his own construction company ...