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How long does it take to get welfare nova scotia

 
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Denice


How long does it take to get welfare nova scotia? I really appreciate your help.
0     In Welfare Cont.05

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    Q. When do welfare checks come out in nova scotia in december?


    When do the welfare checks get deposited in april

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    Q. Anyone know where i can get a capuchin monkey?

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    I live in cape breton island, nova scotia, canada. or if you could tell me where i can order one would be nice too. and i need to know what i need to keep alive like what it eats and what size cage and how big its going to grow etc. thanks

    Still not a good idea! Monkeys don't ever make good pets. Please don't even consider it. Your "freedom" to choose your pet shouldn't override the monkeys' right to live a decent life. You can NOT provide a pet monkey with a decent life. There are groups that actively advocate what they call ‘responsible ownership’ of primates, but these groups are usually largely concerned more with the maintenance of their ‘right’ to keep monkeys than with the welfare of the monkeys themselves. Groups and individuals that are seriously concerned with the welfare of individual monkeys as well as with human safety and conservation of threatened wild primate species inevitably agree: monkeys are not pets. There is no such thing as a ‘domestic’ primate – all primates (apart from humans!) are wild animals. Domestication is a process that happens over many generations of selective breeding. Simply being born in captivity does NOT mean domestication! Chances are, upon reaching adolescence, pet monkeys will become unmanageable, unpredictable and dangerous as they try to assert themselves and as their natural instincts kick in and they do not know what to do with them. Their owners and their owners’ friends and families are at real risk of serious injury. Even small monkeys can be dangerous as they are strong, quick and clever. Pet monkeys who have become threats are often confined to small cages to live out the remainder of their lives with no further hope of social contact. In order to be kept as pets, primates are usually taken from their mothers as infants – whereas they would naturally depend on their mothers for long periods of time, and would maintain close bonds for years. This separation causes acute psychological suffering and lasting damage to both mothers and infants. This also makes infant monkeys particularly needy and responsive to human interaction – which is often mistaken for happiness by their new ‘owners’. All primates are social animals. Denied the opportunity to interact with others of their own kind, pet primates often develop serious psychological problems such as severe aggression, depression, and/or stereotypical behaviours such as rocking, pacing and self-mutilation. Primates have physical and psychological needs which are very difficult to meet in captive situations, such as the need for high levels of intense natural light; the need for vertical space; the need for constant mental stimulation; and the need for an appropriate diet. They are built perfectly for survival in their natural habitats, and are not suited to lives of confinement and solitude. Wild primates spend a huge portion of their waking hours travelling and foraging in search of food. They urinate and defecate wherever they happen to be. In the home, this translates into destruction and mess. Some primates can live for forty or fifty years – a factor which is rarely taken into consideration by prospective pet owners. When pet monkeys outlive their owners (or their owners’ finances or patience!), provisions must be made for their future – but sanctuaries are few and many of these are filled to capacity. Some primates are known to be carriers of diseases which can and do get passed on to humans. The Simian Herpes B virus - which is carried by a “high percentage of macaques” and is “almost always fatal to humans”- is not reliably detectable by testing. Additionally, diseases which seem inconsequential to humans can infect and kill monkeys. All primates are threatened in the wild. The keeping of pet monkeys in places like the North America and the UK appears to have a negative impact on wild populations, whether directly (to feed these trades) or indirectly (by setting examples... if people in America can keep monkeys as pets, why shouldn't people in habitat countries?). Why would anybody choose to keep monkeys as pets in light of all of the above? It is clearly not in the interest of any monkey to be kept as a pet - it is a selfish act that causes all kinds of misery. Please do not do it.

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    Q. Canadian parents: what is canada like?

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    Like my entire family is moving to nova scotia. my husbands and brother in laws company have asked him to go there where theres more opportunities and then my mum said she'd like to live there! its a bit drastic and i know we have to but i'm still curious to find out what canada is like! tell me some bits about it please!! dread-woah!! husband read this and backed up every claim you made :) dread- he really rather liked number 69 :) wow voyager that really makes me wanna live there :s

    1. Great variety in seasons 2. Great world-wide reputation with other countries 3. We invented Hockey 4. We invented Basketball 5. We invented the telephone 6. We invented cable T.V. 7. There are over 2 million Canadian patents 8. We are one of the G-7 countries 9. We are a part of NATO 10. We are a part of NAFTA 11. We are one of the only countries that can put up with Americans 12. We have a low crime rate 13. Canada doesn't have the highest national debt (The U.S. does, ha!) 14. We have a slightly lower debt per-capita than the U.S. 15. We can understand American-English. (Well most of us anyway) 16. Canadians are polite 17. Canada is easy to spell 18. Canada is easy to pronounce 19. We have one of the top education systems 20. Canada has one of the fastest growing populations in the world 21. Canada introduced peace-keeping 22. Our government pays for medicine. In other words, no hospital bills 23. We have nice cities 24. We have clean cities 25. We are at peace with many countries 26. We are the leader in telephone technology 27. We have better technology than the U.S. 28. We made those dinosaurs in Jurassic Park 29. We are not stupid!! 30. We invented refining 31. Canada has more clean water than any other nation 32. Canada is a free and democratic society 33. Hockey is Canada, Canada is hockey 34. We know how, and when to use the word, "eh" 35. We have two official languages, and a leader that speaks his own 36. Unlike what many people think, Canadians are patriotic 37. We are probably the least biased country 38. There's a lot of famous Canadians 39. We don't have to worry about nukes or bombs 40. Lots of ski resorts 41. We have the world's longest bridge (P.E.I. to the mainiland) 42. We have the world's tallest self-supported structure (CN Tower, Toronto) 43. Most of us know what the CN Tower is for 44. We have the world's longest street (Yonge St., Toronto to somewhere near Manitoba) 45. We are great world-leaders with our beer 46. Canadians are 300% less likely to be murdered than Americans 47. Economy living up to most of its potential of all G7 nations 48. Falling crime rate 49. We have the 'Smarties' candy unlike Americans (Very important, isn't it?) 50. Our schools have less of a dicipline problem than American schools 51. Canadian students rank higher than American students in Math, Science, English, ... 52. 1/3 of Microsoft programmers come from the University of Waterloo 53. Canadian invented the baseball glove 54. Canadian invented insulin 55. Canadian invented the kitchen stove 56. Titanic, written, directed and produced by a Canadian, James Cameron 57. Nelvana Corp. of Toronto hired to produce all American cartoons on CBS 58. Canadian woman second in comand at UN (American not 1st or 3rd or 4th or... in command) 59. Canada is the only country at the Atlanta summer olympics that sent more women than men, meaning we aren't sexist 60. Canada is one of the few countries with women in the millitary 61. Canada has a trade surplus, unlike our southern friends 62. Canada is slated to get rid of the deficit and debt before the U.S. 63. 8.6% unemployment rate at the beginning of 1998 and falling rapidly 64. Canadian music is world reknowned 65. Unemployed Canadians receive higher welfare cheques than unemployed Americans 66. Average life expectancy of a Canadian is 79 years, the highest in the world (U.S. is 75 years) 67. Canadian cities lead the world in quality of life. Vancouver (1), Toronto (3), Montreal (15). Closest American city was Atlanta at thrity-something 68. Canadian discovered Pablum (Baby food) 69. Women in Ontario can walk around topless legally (For men: YES! For women: Your freedoms are expanded) 70. Canadian doctor at the Montreal General Hospital was able to map the human brain 71. Recovered bodies of the Titanic are buried in Halifax (not really something to demonstrate patriotism but an interesting fact) 72. Canada never owned slaves (there were slaves in Canada in the 18th century but they were owned by the British government) 73. Many American slaves came secretly to Canada during the American civil war 74. Canada receives more immigrants per capita than the U.S. (almost twice as much) 75. Canada among most popular tourist destinations in the world 76. Canadian universities are world-reknowned for quality education and cheap tuitions 77. Canada is one of few countries at the UN to be apart of the security counsil, giving Canada a strong voice 78. We've got lots of greenspace. 79. Canadians invented the poutine! oh... and we have 100% free healthcare lol... i bet he did!

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    Q. Stranded fiance in canada help...?

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    Okay soo... very complicated story here. my fiance a canadian citizen has been living with his mother in halifax, nova scotia. i know sounds weird at first read the story before you assume the worst. his mom has basically set him up for failure. she pulled him out of high school to watch his little 2 year old sister when he was 17. he's 19 now he was still there sitting there with his life going no where. well she never did one single thing to help him out. he tried on several occasions to get a job while living there but watching his sister for 10 sometimes 12 hours a day wore him out and made job finding limited. and his mom told him if he got a job and didn't have time for his sister she'd kick him out. and there weren't very many overnight jobs and a lot of jobs turned out to be a scam. it's very frustrating. long story short he tried he tried he tried and tried to find a job but him not having a diploma obviously doesn't put him in a good spot for finding a job and she kicked him out on his butt. and now he's in a shelter. he's been there for a month looking tirelessly for a job he's on welfare and that helps but it's not enough to pay for a place to stay. $300 a month after showing proof of job searching. the cheapest apartments there are $700 a month. and the shelter is going to kick him out at the end of september. i want to bring him here to the us so he won't be on the streets. but he needs his birth cert and a passport. not just those things but 2 guarantors to sign for his passport which he doesn't have. i would move up there but i have no place to go and won't be able to legally obtain a job for awhile so if i moved there now then we'd both be homeless! his family doesn't really care that he might be on the streets they just say hope things get better for ya. i don't really know what to do i'm stressed out and worrying all the time about him. it doesn't look like there's any legal way to bring him over here. i wanted to pay for him to get his ged in september but of course he doesn't have time for that right now because he's been doing applications day after day and no one is willing to higher him (most likely because he doesn't have his ged). is there some sort of emergency thing that we can do to bring him to the us so that he doesn't end up sleeping on the freaking sidewalk??? someone please help! i can't eat or sleep because i'm so worried about him! i know it's an odd situation but this is why i don't know what to do! i don't know anyone who works with other countries laws and whatnot! i'm completely lost and frantic with worry!!

    Honestly, judging the comments above, I can safely say that none of which, even with Sources, say that they've been in his situation, which leaves them no room to say "He needs to get his act together". Judging by the post itself, it's obvious he's on the streets as is, so how in the world can he "get his act together" when he's having issues getting a job? The above statement about the whole "free high school" thing doesn't make any sense either... he can't exactly just walk in off the street with clean cloths and a clean shave and say "Hand me my diploma". Also... the "passport" thing.. she just said he didn't have friends or relatives to go to about the guarantors.. please don't skip things and attempt to use it against her. Obviously they both know that he needs an education to get a BETTER job, but as obviously stated, he can't get his GED without money, and he can't get money without *A* job.. which is what the issue is, obviously. Also, I read one of those comments about how they met? I'm sorry, but that ticked me off the most. Me and my wife met online and we're damn well fucking happy, so what's so wrong about long distance relationships? I don't see a Source about how Long Distance Relationships don't work out, so I suggest keeping your mouth shut child, they seems obviously happy so who the f*ck are you to say they can or can't be together? Unless you've been in that poor man's situation, I'd shut up unless you have a DECENT answer to use. Saying shit like "He needs to get his act together" or "He needs a GED to get a job" isn't an answer, you're just stating the obvious or acting like a dumbass. Obviously, everyone needs a GED/High School Equivalency to get a GOOD job, it's not "rocket science" as it was so obviously put. She won't be "dragged down" with him, he isn't a dead weight, he's just been basically trapped in the same job for 3 years (as stated above) and was kicked out without any reconciliation from his own family. So, seriously children, unless you have a decent answer that ISN'T stating the obvious and ISN'T basically saying he's dead weight, I'd keep your mouths shut. Oh and bw022, "Why don't you send him money"..? It's obvious, if he's at a shelter, that he's living on Welfare, which as if you looked it up, judges by the amount you're given by around 70%. Look it up, if you have a job (or someone sends you money), the amount you get from welfare is decreased by 70% of said pay. (If you're getting 200 from welfare, and making 400 from the job, you only get about 80 from Welfare.) As for your "Presumably he has some friends or family" thing.. she just got finished saying that his family turned their back on him... read the entire post next time. Overall, unless you've been in the situation, saying it's a "load" or stuff like "He needs to get his act together" or even by saying the obvious makes you look like a heartless idiot. Unless you have some actual advice, shut it. As for you dear Sammly, as long as you're there for him like any fiancee should be, then there's still a fighting hope for him right? He loves you just as much as you love him correct? I'm sure things will go the right way eventually, depending on his location, he might be able to get an interview at a place nearby. :) Good luck Sammly, to both you and your loving fiancee. I'm sure, if he's tirelessly working on getting a job like you say, he's doing it for you like I would do for my own wife. :) ^Happily married for 5 months now.

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    Q. Ap us history. please help me?

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    1. the indians suffered from their association with the french in new france in all of the following ways except a. exclusion from the fur business b. decimation of their numbers by the white man's disease c. violation of their religious beliefs d. debauchery by the white man's alcohol e. weakening of their traditional way of life 2. the jesuit priests, despite their initial failure in gaining converts, played a vital role because a. of the many converts to catholicism b. of the health care c. they made peace with the indians d. they encouraged indians to participate in the fur trade e. of their exploration and work as geographers 3. the long-range purpose of the albany congress in 1754 was to a. achieve colonial unity and common defense against the french threat b. propose independence of the colonies from britain c. declare war on the iroquois tribe d. gain peace with france 4. unlike the english colonies, in new france a. there were no popularly elected assemblies b. the crown refused to promote the welfare of french colonization c. the population grew very rapidly d. no valuable resources for exploration existed e. the colonists practiced religious toleration 5. in the peace arrangements that ended the seven years' war a. france surrendered all of its territorial claims to north america b. england turned florida over to spain c. france lost all its valuable sugar islands in the west indies d. the british got all of canada except nova scotia 6. for the american colonies, the seven years' war a. ended the myth of british invincibility b. left them in need of experienced officers c. offered the opportunity to grow closer to the british d. gained exclusive control of the slave trade 7. during the seven years' war, a. colonial militiamen were impressed with the seeming invincibility of the british regulars b. british officers roundly praised the skillful fighting ability of colonial troops c. british officials were disturbed by the lukewarm support of many colonials d. all american trade with spain and france ended 8. with the end of the seven years' war, the disunity, jealousy, and suspicion that had long existed in the american colonies a. continued without change b. began to melt somewhat c. resulted in renewd acts of violence d. none of the above 9. france had to give up its vision of a north american new france when a. its fishing industry faltered b. farming proved to be unprofitable c. it was defeated by the british in 1713 and 1763 d. it could not entice enough settlers to america 10. the primary thing that the acadians and quebecois believed that bound them together was their a. hatred for spain b. desire to return to france c. military experience d. french language 11. in sense, the history of the u.s. began with the a. revolutionary war b. boston tea party c. founding of the first colony 1607 d. fall of quebec and montreal 12. with the defeat of cheif pontiac and his alliance, the british decided to a. stabilize indian-white relations b. let the colonists assume financial responsibility for defending themselves c. remove troops stationed in the colonies d. enlist the aid of france to halt the indian menace 13. cheif pontiac decided to try to drive british out of the ohio valley because a. the british were weak as a result of the seven years' war b. of the proclamation of 1763 c. the indians were in a precarious position d. the french government had promised to help 14. the proclamation of 1763 was desighned mainly to a. oppress the colonists b. punish the indians c. allow western settlement by the colonists d. work out a fair settlement of the indian problem 15. in the wake of the proclamation of 1763 a. relations with france improved b. relations between the american colonies and the british government imporved c. the american colonies believed their destiny had been destroyed d. american colonists moved west, defying the proclamation

    Do you want to pass the AP exam? Or do you just want a good grade? Because if you really want all your hard work in the class to count...this is not the way to do it. I took the APUSH exam last year, and it's not easy. Cheating online may seem like a good idea now, but when you're sitting in that testing room next May and you don't know anything you're going to regret it. You'll be hurting even more when some colleges don't accept you because they see that you did poorly on an AP exam. Go do your own homework, okay?

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    Q. Are there any jobs for 12-15 year olds ?

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    Employment of adolescents across Canada - In Alberta, teenagers can work as of the age of 12, but only under certain conditions: outside of normal class hours, with the written consent of a parent or guardian, and with the approval of the Director of Labour Standards. Between 12 and 14 years of age, they are only allowed to work at certain jobs such as clerk or delivery person of small wares for a retail store, clerk or messenger in an office, delivery person for the distribution of newspapers, flyers or handbills. For any other type of work, they need the approval of the Director of Labour Standards. They are allowed to work on school days, but no more than two hours. - In British Columbia, children can work before the age of 12, with the permission of the Director of Labour Standards, who will determine the conditions of employment. Between 12 and 14, the parents’ consent is sufficient provided the employer observes certain restrictions (no work during school hours, for instance). The province allows working on school days, but no longer than four hours. - On Prince Edward Island, it is possible to work before 16 years of age. The Youth Employment Act specifies, though, that an adolescent under 16 cannot hold a job that could harm his or her health, safety, moral or physical development. It is also forbidden to work more than three hours on a school day, to work in construction, between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m., and during normal school hours (children are required to go to school until 16 years of age). The Labour Standards Inspector may excuse adolescents from these restrictions as long as their school attendance does not suffer, with the consent of a parent or guardian. - In Manitoba, youth under 16 years of age may also work, subject to certain conditions: obtain a permit from the Director of Labour Standards manager, not work for a company in which his or her safety, health or welfare could be jeopardized, in the Director’s opinion, and not work in a job where a large part of the cleaning, modification, repair or maintenance is done using machinery. - In New Brunswick, youth under 14 years of age cannot work at jobs that are likely to be unwholesome or harmful to their health, welfare, moral or physical development. These restrictions also apply to young people under 16. Adolescents under the age of 14 are not allowed to work in any industrial undertaking, in the forestry industry, in the construction industry, in a garage or service station, in a hotel or restaurant, in a theatre, dance hall or shooting gallery, or as an elevator operator, unless a permit has been issued by the Director of Employment Standards. On school days, work is limited to three hours at most. - In Nova Scotia, the restrictions imposed on adolescents of less than 14 years of age are comparable with those in effect in New Brunswick, i.e. work for an industrial undertaking, forestry industry, etc., and also apply to youth under 16 years of age. - In Ontario, youth under 14 years of age cannot work in an industrial establishment. Under the age of 15, they cannot work in a factory, and under the age of 16, they cannot work in on a construction site, in the forestry industry, or an open-pit mine. They are also not allowed to work during school hours. - In Quebec, youth under 14 years of age are not allowed to work without the written consent of the parent or guardian. If they are under 16 years of age, they cannot work in an open-pit mine, a milling facility or a workshop, or apprentice in a trade or profession regulated by law.

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