leisure facility: If they had room, Food Matters would accept 100 people per session, she said, according to Metro News. But they can only take in about 30 at the North Centennial Recreation and Leisure Facility, located at 90 Sinclair St., said instructor Maria Paguiligan. The program, which launched in July and runs once a month, has seen about 75 participants so far and a wait list much longer, according to program coordinator Amy Henderson, who looking to expand. Paguiligan is a newcomer herself, having arrived in Winnipeg from the Philippines in 2011 to have a better future for her son, now 18. is not just to help you get a job, but it something you can use in the home, Paguiligan said in a recent interview. A former nursing instructor in the Philippines, Paguiligan now works part-time for the Winnipeg School Division as an educational assistant, part-time at a care home serving food and once per month teaching with Food Matters. When we first came here, there were people who helped us along the way through our transition here in Canada, and doing this is sort of like paying it forward.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under leisure facility, food matters topics.
12.10.16