A full service neighbourhood grocery store offering a home-style bakery, farm fresh produce, full-service meat department with butcher, seafood and ready to serve take home meals from Our Kitchen.
Harbourview Training Center is a non-profit organization located in Souris, Prince Edward Island. We provide vocational training, on site employment and job training as well as a broad range of support services to clients with intellectual disabilities who live in the Morell to East Point district.As an agency which promotes inclusion, we strongly believe in the principles of creating opportunities for individuals with an intellectual disability to participate in their community, not only socially and economically, but by allowing individuals to gain a stronger sense of self worth and independence.Presently we provide services for 25 clie
The PEI Council of People with Disabilities has adopted as its mission the promotion of the full participation and inclusion of people with disabilities in Island society.
The PEI Association for Newcomers to Canada (PEI ANC) was incorporated in 1993 as a non-profit charitable organization. Our mandate is to provide short-term settlement services, and long-term inclusion and community integration programs for new immigrants in the province of Prince Edward Island.The Association speaks publicly on immigrant issues and advocates on behalf of newcomers.
On behalf of Town Council members we would like to welcome you to The Town of Borden-Carleton, a small but beautiful place at the foot of the Confederation Bridge. The Community of Borden-Carleton was created as a result of the April 12, 1995 amalgamation of the Town of Borden and the Community of Carleton Siding. The town covers a land area of 12.94 square km and had a population of 798 according to the 2006 Census of Canada.
WelcomeAmyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrigs disease) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease. People living with the disease become progressively paralyzed due to degeneration of the upper and lower motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. Eighty per cent of people with ALS die within two to five years of diagnosis unable to breathe or swallow. Ten per cent of those affected may live for 10 years or longer.Other neurodegenerative diseases include Alzheimers disease, Huntingtons disease and Parkinsons disease. According to the World Health Organization, neurodegenerative diseases are predicted to surpass cancer as the second leading cause of death in Canada by 2040.ALS has no known cure or effective treatment yet. For every person diagnosed with ALS, a person living with ALS dies.