Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Canadian military personnel from Newfoundland and Labrador (2 C, 17 P) Canadian military personnel from the Northwest Territories (2 P) Canadian military personnel from Nova Scotia (1 C, 53 P)
Foster children in Canada are known as permanent wards (crown wards in Ontario). [1] A ward is someone, in this case a child, placed under protection of a legal guardian and are the legal responsibility of the government. Census data from 2011 counted children in foster care for the first time, counting 47,885 children in care.
Military personnel from Toronto (93 P) Pages in category "Canadian military personnel from Ontario" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 201 total.
Only employees who report to work at an establishment in Ontario, or who are paid from an establishment in Ontario. [8]: §6 Employment in the federal government is exempt. [8]: §7 Employees who are under 18 years of age or over 70 years, and those receiving an ORPP pension (other than a pension to a surviving spouse), are exempt.
In the U.S., retired military receive a military retirement pay, not called a "pension" as they can be recalled to active duty at any time. Military retirement pay is calculated on number of years on active duty, final pay grade and the retirement system in place when they entered service.
To be eligible Canadians must have been unemployed or have had a 50% reduction in average weekly income compared to the previous year due to COVID-19. [33] If a participant made more than $38,000 annual salary, $0.50 of every dollar earned on the CRB would have to paid back if the participant was still taking it.
Active military families were more likely than Veteran and non-military families to have moved to a different province or territory in the past five years. The report detailed that 24. 1% of couple families and 15. 4% of one-parent families in the active category lived in a different province compared to 4. 0% and 1. 9%, respectively, for ...
Until the 2009–2010 fiscal year, Ontario was the only province to have never received equalization payments. In 2009–2010, due to the global Great Recession, Ontario began to receive equalization payments [16] with its first payment amounting to $347-million. [53] The equalization formula is "based on a three-year average of economic growth".