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The Report Card on Alberta's Elementary Schools: 2003 Edition collects a variety of relevant, objective indicators of school performance into one, easily accessible public document so that anyone can analyze and compare the performance of individual schools. By doing so, the Report Card assists parents when they choose a school for their children and encourages and assists all those seeking to improve their schools.

This annual Report Card uses relevant, publicly-available data to rate and rank 766 of Alberta's public, separate, private, charter, and francophone elementary schools. This is the only comprehensive and widely-distributed Report Card on elementary schools available in Canada.

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The major avoidable causes of cancer are: (1) smoking, which accounts for 27% of cancer deaths in Canada and 80% to 90% of deaths from lung cancer; (2) dietary imbalances (e.g., lack of sufficient amounts of dietary fruits and vegetables), which account for about an­other third; (3) chronic infections, mostly in developing countries; and (4) hormonal factors, which are influenced primarily by life-style.

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Accountability to Citizens in the Westminster Model of Government: More Myth than Reality 2003-02-01 Governments in western industrialized countries engage a wide variety of activities and account for a substantial fraction of the Gross Domestic Product. In 2000, for the average family,

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In Sweden, excessive waiting times for elective surgery have been a persistent and much-debated problem for many years. Between 1987 and 1997, four different national policy approaches attempted to reduce waiting lists and thereby improve the quality of health serviced in Sweden.

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The Swedish health care sector expanded rapidly during the 1960s and 1970s. In the 1980s, the nation experienced budget deficits and increasing problems with long line-ups. It became evident that global budgets and a lack of incentives to be efficient caused problems that needed to be addressed. Although the health care system continues to be publicly financed, the views regarding who should provide health care are shifting in favour of private caregivers. This shift started with patients outraged by poor treatment and long line-ups, as well as with hospital staff frustrated with low wages and poor working conditions. Swedish taxpayers, who pay the highest taxes in the world, were not impressed with rising health care costs and the possibility of increases in taxes to cover these costs. By the early 1990s, it was time for a major restructuring of the system. This report focuses on Greater Stockholm, where most of the restructuring initiatives have been implemented to increase accessibility, competition, and patient choice.

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The privatization of liquor retailing in Alberta was announced on September 2, 1993, and was completed on March 5, 1994. Over nine years have now passed since liquor retailing in Alberta was privatized, and there have been major changes in the number of stores selling liquor products (which are defined to include all beverage alcohol products), the product selection available at the wholesale and retail levels, and the number of people employed in liquor stores and their wages.

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In its release of 2001 Census data earlier this month, Statistics Canada reported a growing reliance on immigration as a source of skills and knowledge. The covering statement goes on to note that recent immigrants represented 70 percent of total labour force growth over the past decade and could account for virtually all labour force growth by 2011 (Statistics Canada, 2003).