Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sex Workers' Action Program (SWAP) Hamilton is a sex worker-led advocacy group in Hamilton, Ontario led by Executive Director Jelena Vermilion. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Begun in 2018, SWAP established a physical communal space on Barton Street in May of 2020, where individuals could gather in a safe environment. [ 1 ]
Hill is a police officer, with experience in Hamilton and Toronto. He has been also active with Habitat For Humanity, and received the Alan Ladkin Memorial trophy for community involvement in 1993. Hill worked in Toronto at the time of the election, but resided in Hamilton. He was thirty-one years old (Hamilton Spectator, 13 January 2006).
Hamilton West—Ancaster—Dundas is a provincial electoral district in Ontario, Canada. It elects one member to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario . This riding was created in 2015.
Kitchener Centre: Nicholas Wendler: M Kitchener: 1,597 3.05% 4th Kitchener—Conestoga: Bob Jonkman: M Elmira: Computer Consultant 1,314 2.75% 4th Kitchener South—Hespeler: David Weber: 2014 Ontario provincial candidate for Kitchener—Conestoga: M Kitchener: Police officer 1,767 3.69% 4th Lambton—Kent—Middlesex: Jim Johnston
The National Center for Voluntary Action was an independent, private, non-profit organization that existed in the 1970s, and then extended on in merged forms, that sought to encourage volunteerism on the part of American citizens and organizations, assist in program development for voluntary efforts, and sought to make voluntary action an important force in American society.
It was created out of parts of Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Westdale, Hamilton Centre and Hamilton Mountain. [ 4 ] Following the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution , the riding will gain the Carpenter neighbourhood from Flamborough—Glanbrook , and will lose its territory in Strathcona (comprising the uninhabited section of ...
Hamilton Centre is a provincial electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that is represented in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario. It was created for the 1926 provincial election but abolished with the 1999 provincial election when the number of constituencies represented in the legislature was reduced.
Kitchener South—Hespeler was created from parts of the Kitchener—Conestoga, Kitchener Centre, and Cambridge electoral districts as a result of a redistribution process conducted by Elections Canada from 2012 to 2013. [2] The riding did not undergo any boundary changes following the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution.