Ontario gave parents more than $1B in cash over 2 years. Here's where the money went
During the pandemic, the Ontario government started to hand out cash to parents to help offset the cost of at-home learning while schools were shuttered.
A Fredericton woman is awe-struck by what she saw Tuesday morning.
A moose was strolling down Sunset Drive around 9 a.m. when Jennifer Grace was driving by.
"It was so cool to see it," Grace said.
"I've seen moose in the country, but never in city limits."
At the time, she was driving her puppy to the veterinarian. Grace says her daughter thought the passing moose was a horse.
"As we got closer, she shouted 'That's a moose.'"
Grace pulled over into a nearby parking lot.
"It walked right by us. There was a lot of people driving by and some workers in front of the care home, as well as some residents," she said.
Grace took a video and posted it to social media. As of Tuesday evening, it's already been shared hundreds of times and been viewed more than 55,000 times.
Nick Brown, spokesperson for the Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development said the Fredericton office received a phone call Tuesday about a moose sighting in the Sunset Drive area.
"Staff went to locate the animal but were not able to do so. A large, wooded area is located nearby, and staff are hopeful the moose returned to the forest," Brown said.
He said young moose are commonly pushed away by their pregnant mothers in the spring as they prepare to give birth to another calf in the near future.
"Moose are wild animals and unpredictable, and staff will respond if any potential safety issues are reported by the public," Brown said.
During the pandemic, the Ontario government started to hand out cash to parents to help offset the cost of at-home learning while schools were shuttered.
Canada's ambassador to Russia says while Ottawa has 'grave concerns' about the Kremlin's 'longer-term trends,' the war in Ukraine is 'a primary barrier to a change in the relationship.'
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Parachutists jumping from Second World War-era planes hurled themselves Sunday into now peaceful Normandy skies where war once raged, heralding a week of ceremonies for the fast-disappearing generation of Allied troops who fought from D-Day beaches 80 years ago.
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