Middlesex Community Living is a not-for-profit charitable organization that supports and advocates for the rights of adults with intellectual disabilities and their families. Currently we assist over 80 people in the Strathroy-Caradoc community to live independent lives. We support people who have a variety of intellectual disability diagnoses including; general developmental delay, Down syndrome, Fetal Alcohol syndrome, Autism, Cerebral Palsy, as well as many others. It is our vision and mission to develop and sustain an inclusive community and to champion and support people to learn, to define and to live independent lives as valued citizens.
Middlesex Community Living is excited to introduce you to Partners for Planning Resource Network.An innovative online resource that assists families in creating a good life and secure future for their loved one. The Resource Network makes the planning process easier by offering immediate access to critical information and advice from professionals and experts.Get started today!Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act. The purpose of the AODA 2005 is to benefit all Ontarians by developing, implementing and enforcing accessibility standards in order to achieve accessibility for Ontarians with disabilities by 2025.
Oxford Law Association Library offer legal services in Woodstock. Their capable team is available as solicitors, legal advisors, barristers and even more. Oxford Law Association Library can help in the matter of temporary visa, permanent residency or citizenship.
In early October of 1949 the YMCA director asked if I would be interested in organizing a model airplane club for boys 8-14 years of age. I selected these models with different skill level in building.
WDDS (Woodstock and District Developmental Services) is a non-profit charitable organization that has been providing opportunities and supports for people with developmental disabilities in Oxford County since 1959. The organization began over 50 years ago when a group of caring and dedicated people had a vision that people with developmental disabilities should be welcomed and included in their community. These founding members began an organizational culture that recognized the importance of volunteerism and community partnerships that have continued to grow and develop over the years in response to the needs and wishes of people with a developmental disability.
Chamber of Commerce representatives have met with Mitzie Hunter, Associate Minister of Finance, to present her with a letter that calls on the government to consider how the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan (ORPP) will affect the province's business competitiveness.Chamber research across Ontario confirms that business is concerned that a new mandatory Ontario pension plan will hurt job creation and the province's overall competitiveness. Though there are many undetermined details, the ORPP, as we understand it today, would require workers and employers to each contribute 1.9 percent of earnings, up to $90,000, annually to the pension plan.Signed by over 50 leaders from Ontario's Chamber Network, the letter we have submitted to the Associate Minister calls on the Government of Ontario to provide employers with answers to six crucial outstanding questions:What will be the impact of a fullyimplemented ORPP?How will the government treat businesses who cannot afford to match mandatory contributions under the ORPP