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Torontonians Deliver Report Card to City Hall
Majority (77%) Gives `Good' Marks For City Overall, But One Half (50%) Give Bad Marks for Level of Taxes for Services
Highest `Good' Marks
Go To Job Police Chief Is Doing (88%) -
Toronto Residents Signal Miller Time is Over: Mayor David Miller's Approval Rating Plummets From 69% in 2005 to 43% Today as Majority (57%) Says City on Wrong Track
In `Head to Head' Vote Challenge, Both John Tory and George Smitherman Beat Incumbent Mayor by 7 Points Each
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Three quarters (72%) of Working Canadians Believe that Current Levels of Adult Literacy in Canada are a Problem
Only Eight in Ten (79%) `Strongly Agree' that If They Were to Lose Their Job Today, They Possess the Necessary literacy Skills
to Secure a New Job -
One in Three (32%) Parents Says Their Child Doesn't Always Eat Breakfast Without a Struggle
But Nine in Ten (90%) Say That Eating Breakfast is `Very Important' For their Child's Daily Health, Mental Performance
and Emotional State -
Three in Ten (28%) Online Canadians Have Sent Money Electronically In the Last Year
But Half a Million Canadians Say They Typically Never Pay Back the Money They Owe to Friends and Family
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What's Your Child Doing on Facebook?
Online Canadian Teens (76%) are Significantly More Likely than Parents (56%) to Have a Social Network Profile; Facebook Still Dominates
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Majority (53%) Say Harper Conservatives Doing `Good Job' and Should Continue Governing as Only 39% Believe Ignatieff Liberals Would Do `Better Job'
But Tory Kudos Don't Translate as Liberals (35%) and Tories (34%) Continue in Tight See-Saw Horserace
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What? You Don't Have A Social Network Profile? You Are Now In The Minority.
Dramatic 17% Increase in the Percentage of Online Canadians with a Social Network Profile in the Last 18 Months Facebook's Dominance Continues
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Only a Slim Majority (55%) `Agrees' That Health Care Services in Their Community Are Patient-Centred
Best Scores Related to Treatment from Health Care Providers;
Worst Scores Related to Wait Times and Appointment Delays -
One Quarter (25%) of Canadians Aged 25-65 Spend Less Than One Hour a Week Engaged in Physical Activity
A Majority (55%) Says That Finding an Activity That is Convenient for Them Would Help Them Become More Physically Active