What We Know About the Baltimore Bridge Collapse So Far

Published: March 27, 2024, 6:15 p.m.

THE MEDICAL RECORD:\xa0 ONTARIO'S HEALTHCARE FUNDING PLANS\n\nLibby Znaimer is joined by Dr. Alisa Naiman, Family Physician and Founder and Medical Director of The Medical Station in Toronto, Dr. Malcolm Moore, Medical Oncologist with the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, and Dr. Amol Verma, a staff physician in General Internal Medicine at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto.\n\nThis week: the province released its budget. Our panel assesses what funding it includes for the healthcare system and give the Ford government a grade on their plans.\n\n\n\n\nTHE BALTIMORE BRIDGE COLLAPSE: SUPPLY CHAIN DISRUPTIONS AND BRIDGE SAFETY\n\nLibby Znaimer is now joined by Jim Bookbinder, a Professor in the Department of Management Sciences at the University of Waterloo and Rob Handfield, Bank of America Professor of Supply Chain Management at North Carolina State University.\n\nThe Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed this week after a cargo ship collided right into it. As many as 6 people are presumed dead and many questions remain unanswered including: how safe was the bridge? And what implications will this have for the global supply chain including right here at home in Canada? And, could this all have been prevented?\n\n\n\n\nTHE CAA KICKS OFF ITS 21st ANNUAL WORST ROADS CAMPAIGN\n\nLibby Znaimer is now joined by Teresa Di Felice, Assistant Vice President,\xa0 Government and Community Relations\xa0 for CAA South Central Ontario.\n\nToday, the CAA kicks off its annual Worst Roads Campaign where residents get to vote on which roads they feel are the worst whether you are a driver, cyclist or pedestrian. Do you have thoughts about roads that you find particularly treacherous from personal experience?