Pilatus
Member
To get business they may have to offer ,two goes for the price of one!!!!I wonder if hookers will be able to get wage help from the gubament
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To get business they may have to offer ,two goes for the price of one!!!!I wonder if hookers will be able to get wage help from the gubament
i thought they serviced the government.I wonder if hookers will be able to get wage help from the gubament
Not me! I haven't been near Calgary. Was just on FB.What's a prarie girl doing that far up a tall building?
How's thing holding on up your way? Trying to warm up here, but the wind is persisting from the NE and NW on alternate days, so it's keeping things a little cool.Not me! I haven't been near Calgary. Was just on FB.
Was cold end of last week but warmed up again now. Getting puddles in some places but still a lot of snow cover. No bare ground visible except under the odd tree and where it's been ploughed.How's thing holding on up your way? Trying to warm up here, but the wind is persisting from the NE and NW on alternate days, so it's keeping things a little cool.
Of top concern for many in the agriculture sector is the continued uninterrupted operation of the province’s meat-packing facilities. Alberta is home to two of Canada’s three major beef processing plants — the JBS plant at Brooks and the Cargill plant at High River. These two plants, plus the smaller Harmony Beef plant at Balzac, are capable of processing more than 50,000 head per week, accounting for more than three-quarters of beef production in Canada.
“Shutting down one of those plants would compromise the food security of many Canadians,” said Sylvain Charlebois, senior director of the agri-food analytics lab at Dalhousie University. “You’re talking about thousands and thousands of kilos a day. You cut that out and it becomes an issue.”