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Bean Bag Chairs Brantford

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If you’re looking for summer fun, you’ve come to the right place. Our selection of Floats and Inflatables are sure to start the party no matter the time of day. We have a wide variety of floats from industry leading manufacturers that are sure to please even the toughest critics. We carry floats in the shape of animals, simple bean bag floats, and more elaborate floats that bring a whole lot of fun to your backyard. Create the ultimate backyard escape this summer with an inflatable pool float. WOW Bouncer Floating Trampoline Tube A Rama 10 Person Tube A Rama 6 Person First Class Pool Float Double Salon Lounge Float Water Dog Pool Tube Dog Days Bone Float Giant Parrot Ride-On Float Giant Swan Ride-On Float Giant Black Swan Ride-On Float Giant Flamingo Ride-On Float Rock Lobster Ride-On Float Wild Things Zebra Float Sunsoft Chaise Lounge Float Sunchaser Sunsoft Luxury Lounger Sunchaser Luxury Lounge Chair




Sunchaser Sling Style Lounge Chair Pool Bean Bag Blue Hammock Float Pool Bean Bag Oasis Blue Float Why do we ask for your postal code? By providing your delivery postal code, you’ll allow us to: Let you know immediately if we can service your area. Tailor our selection to make sure you see only items that can be delivered to you. Inform you if the item is currently in stock. Offer you special pricing that may only be available in some areas. Help you find a local showroom in case you want to see an item in-person. Show you estimated delivery dates without having to check out. The Brick respects your privacy and will not share this information with anyone. Enter your postal code to check your local price. Brands delivered in Canada Brands delivered in USA Please select the country for deliveryAt Cedarwood we are driven by a real passion for our furniture, a passion for our business and a passion to be the best in the industry at what we do.




We use the highest quality materials, computerised machinery and highly trained staff to create the excellent quality that we provide. Please have a browse through our site using the navigation above and have a look at the range of products we have in store or click on the links below to take you to your chosen section: In the Fitted Kitchen Range:Wooden KitchensHigh Gloss KitchensPainted KitchensIn the Fitted Bedroom Range:Wood EffectHigh GlossKids BedsIn the Bedroom Section: Bedroom RangesKids BedsDivans & Mattresses In the Office Section:Office DesksOffice ChairsIn the Accessories Section:MirrorsBean BagsRugsLightingPicturesSpecial OffersClearanceSliding WardrobesFurniture Section 12 Woodbine Business Park, New Ross, Co, Wexford Opening hours:Monday to Saturday Sundays & Bank Holidays 71-73 Ross Road, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford Did you know that our design service is free? Speak to one of our excellent designers about planning your beautiful new kitchen or wardrobe.




We have amazing ideas waiting for you. Thanks to everyone for "liking us" on Facebook and showing your support. We are delighted to have got more than 3000 likes. To show our appreciation we will be running occasional giveaways exclusively to our Facebook fans so check out our page to see our unbeatable current offers and don't forget to like us to be involved! Toddler & Kid's Bedrooms Twin / Full Room Bunk & Loft BedsFantasy Fields Toddler Furniture 3 & 4 Years ALL OPTIONS FOR Brand Dena Night Owl Collection ALL OPTIONS FOR Character/Theme Disney Winnie the Pooh Mix & Match Collections Star Wars: Rogue One Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles You're So Sweet Collection ALL OPTIONS FOR Rating Mattresses & Mattress Pads Twin / Full Beds Twin / Full MattressesToys”R”Us, Babies”R”Us are registered trademarks of Toys”R”Us (Canada) Ltd. Use of this site signifies your acceptance of Toys"R"Us Website Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.




Our exclusive new handcrafted bunnies are full of personality—and they just hopped by to say hello.An unhandled exception was generated during the execution of the current web request. Information regarding the origin and location of the exception can be identified using the exception stack trace below.Swivel StoolsBarstoolHidden StoolsHidden ChairsKitchenideasSpacesavingKitchen IslandsRustic Kitchen IslandKitchen Island SeatingForwardSwivel stools tuck under kitchen island!!! PERFECT since the genius guys that built the ranch house stuck two cedar pillars 2 feet from the edge of the bar, so the only barstools that fit are the typical backless ones you can get at the dollar store. This would be SOOOO much prettier!!!Welcome to East West Futons. Not your average futon store, specializing in small space solutions for urban living. From college to condos to cottage we furnish it all and for every budget. Located in the heart of the Annex we provide innovative, affordable furniture and accessories for modern living.




We love rooms that inspire creativity and comfort. From local to global we choose responsible and sustainable resources. We care about the environment and what you breathe. Since 1992 we have been proudly making our own futons and do not spray our cotton with any fire retardant chemicals. We care about you. Come check us out! Sign up for emails and be the first to know about products, sales & offers. © 2012 EAST WEST FUTON INC., All Rights Reserved.Irwin Elman, the official advocate for children in Ontario, is launching an online database that reveals how few inquest recommendations ever get implemented in the cases of children who died in custody.  Order this photo  Note: This article has been edited from a previously published version.Hundreds of key recommendations to prevent the deaths of children in custody have been ignored or rejected by government agencies, the Toronto Star has learned.Agencies responsible for protecting young wards are shielded from public scrutiny once an inquest ends through “bizarre” privacy legislation that forces the office of Ontario’s children’s advocate to keep secret any information that might identify a youth.“




It’s bizarre,” said Irwin Elman, Ontario’s Advocate for Children and Youth. “While the inquest has been public and the record is public, I cannot identify the person publicly and must even go so far as to not identify agencies.”On Thursday, his office will launch a new online database — the only one of its kind in Canada — that tracks inquest recommendations into the deaths of children in custody. Many of these deaths have occurred in jails or within the child welfare system. In the past 18 years, there have been 26 such cases.But the provincial act that created Elman’s position means that a great deal of relevant information will be missing from this new public record.The act forbids him from identifying any child under provincial protection without his or her consent. And because it is impossible to obtain consent from a dead child, his office has been forced to redact from the database any information that could potentially identify anyone under the age of 18.This includes exact dates, locations and the names of provincial ministries, associations, government-funded programs and service providers involved in a child’s death.




Elman said he has repeatedly asked the Ministry of Children and Youth Services to change the act but it has refused. “I can’t imagine (the act) was written this way on purpose,” he said.Paradoxically, the Ashley Smith inquest will attract frenzied media coverage when it begins on Monday but he will be barred from revealing her identity.“This person who has had their name and photo splashed across televisions and newspapers, to say we’re not going to allow him to identify her, it’s ludicrous,” he said.Ministry spokesperson Gloria Bacci-Puhl said the confidentiality provisions of the act were crafted in consultation with the Information and Privacy Commissioner to protect the privacy and legal rights of the child.After an inquest, any agency subject to a recommendation is given a year by the coroner to act. Of the 1,635 recommendations made since 1995, only 17 per cent had been implemented. Another 24 per cent were listed as “had or will be implemented.”About 26 per cent of agencies did not make their response available to the coroner.




Another 5 per cent had no response or a response that could not be evaluated.Keeping tabs on recommendations through an online database will, Elman believes, force government agencies to be more accountable.“This database is us saying that as a province we owe it to the children who have died. This is their legacy,” he said. “I hope it pushes all the sectors towards taking these recommendations seriously.”Many of the recommendations cited in Elman’s database have been repeated over and over by inquest juries.Recommendations are not drawn from “thin air,” says Michael Blain, counsel for Ontario’s chief coroner. Juries “must have heard some evidence to support the recommendation.”Since 1995, at least seven different inquests have pressed for greater access to mental health assessments, treatment services and appropriate placements for youth with mental health issues.Three-year-old Matthew Reid was in the care of a foster home affiliated with the Children’s Aid Society in St. Catharines, Ont. when a 14-year-old girl, a new ward at the home, fatally smothered him.




The inquest concluded in late 2010. So far, none of the jury’s 45 recommendations have been implemented.A key recommendation arising from that hearing focused on improved information-sharing between government agencies.Elman is skeptical of agencies that claim to be in the process of adopting jury recommendations.“I would argue that if they’re still thinking about it 15 years later, that means it’s not going to be implemented,” he said.One unnamed child welfare agency pledged to hire a quality assurance manager after the death of one of its wards. The job has yet to be filled due to “front line workload demands and budgetary restraints.” That recommendation was made more than 10 years ago.David Meffe, 16, hanged himself while on “suicide watch” at Toronto Youth Assessment Centre in 2002. The inquest into his death revealed that jail staff had virtually no medical history for the youth; it recommended that medical records be attached to court-ordered assessments.But this did not happen for Pickering’s Gleb Alfyorov, 17, who hanged himself with his shoelaces in an Ontario jail in 2008 while awaiting a psychiatric assessment.




In fact, eight other juries had already made the same pleas for change that they made in Alfyorov’s inquest in 2011.Michael Fraleigh, lawyer for David Meffe’s family, said privacy must be balanced against the greater good.“While I think privacy is important, the more important work is to have inquest juries make recommendations and have them be listened to,” he said.“If there is a name and even a face associated with the person who has passed away … it brings it home.” With data analysis by Andrew Bailey The Lost ChildrenThe Toronto Star has identified six of the 26 children who have died in government custody since 1995. Their cases appear in the provincial children and youth advocate’s new online database, which tracks inquest recommendations. While the provincial advocate is forbidden by legislation to include any information that might identify a youth in custody, the Star is not. Identities were drawn from the general timelines and the limited case details included in the database.




David Meffe, 16In 2002, Meffe hanged himself in his cell while on “suicide watch” at a Toronto youth jail. The note he left his parents said, “Day by day it is getting worse ... This place really gets to your head.”Many of the jury’s recommendations were implemented, including the closing of the jail and the call for strip search privacy. Some recommendations were still under consideration, among them one that there be a one-to-eight ratio of staff to youth and that security clothing be made of rip-proof material to discourage youths in custody making ligatures.Stephanie Jobin, 13Jobin, a severely autistic and developmentally delayed Crown ward, died after she was placed in a Brampton group home. Her heart stopped beating and she suffered irreparable brain damage after three staff members straddled her, one holding a bean bag chair over her upper body, to control her aggressive behaviour. Three days later she was declared brain dead.The jury recommended an integrated continuum of services for children and youth with complex needs — including full-time residential care and in-home supports — be established in the nine regions of Ontario.




This recommendation is listed as “under consideration.”Matthew Reid, 3Reid was in the care of a foster home affiliated with the Children’s Aid Society in St. Catharines, Ont., when a 14-year-old girl, a new ward at the home, smothered the young boy to death. The inquest was conducted in the winter of 2010. So far, none of the jury’s 45 recommendations have been implemented. Many of the recommendations focused on improving care for youth and information-sharing among Children’s Aid Societies,Gleb Alfyorov, 17In May 2008, Alfyorov hanged himself in his cell at the Syl Apps Youth Centre in Oakville while awaiting a court-ordered psychiatric assessment. A judge sent the Pickering teen to the centre for a 30-day psychiatric assessment, thinking the jail was a hospital for troubled youth. Alfyorov was strip-searched and put in a cell. No one bothered to read the court document explaining why he was there.Before his death, eight other inquest juries had pleaded with provincial ministries and agencies to fix systemic problems like those that ultimately plagued Alfyorov.




There have been repeated recommendations to curb or ban the use of solitary confinement to deal with mentally ill kids.Juries have also asked the government to stop using privacy concerns as a reason to withhold critical information like medical records when a youth is transferred between facilities.William Edgar, 13A ward of the Toronto Children’s Aid Society, he fell unconscious and died on March 31, 1999 after a senior staff member restrained him at a group home near Peterborough. An inquest was called into his death because it appeared the recommendations following Stephanie Jobin’s death were being ignored. The inquest jury ruled Edgar’s death a homicide and issued 61 recommendations, most of which have been put in place, according to the database.Jared Osidacz, 8In 2006, the Brantford, Ont. boy was stabbed to death by his father, Andrew Osidacz, while on an unsupervised court-ordered visit. Hours later, the older Osidacz was fatally shot by police; he had also stabbed his girlfriend and her 8-year-old daughter.

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