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An Open Letter to the Citizens of Niagara Falls Riding
    Craitor to continue to serve as Niagara Falls MPP
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Full-day Learning Coming To 21 Schools In the Niagara Region
    The Ontario Government is Committed to Building A Well-Educated Workforce
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Full-day Learning Coming To 21 Schools In the Niagara Region
    The Ontario Government is Committed to Building A Well-Educated Workforce
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Craitor Asks for Public Inquiry into Death of Fort Erie Teen
    To answer concerns about Fort Erie ER closure
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NIAGARA PREPARES TO WELCOME THE OLYMPIC TORCH
    Ontario Government provides support for community torch relay celebrations
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Provincial News
Test Scores Rise For Ontario Students
    McGuinty Government Preparing Students For Future Success
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Ontario Attracts Clean Energy Manufacturing Plants
    McGuinty Government Brings Investment and up to 1,400 Jobs To Ontario
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Keeping Drivers Safe
    McGuinty Government Implements New Drinking And Driving Measures
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Consultations Begin On Public Sector Compensation
    McGuinty Government Takes Next Step In Plan To Manage Responsibly
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Province Takes Action on Eco Fees
    McGuinty Government Committed To Keeping Household Hazardous Waste Out Of Environment
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Nearly 600 Schools Set For Full-Day Early Learning McGuinty Government Helps Youngest Students On Road To Success

January 12th – Ontario will launch its full-day learning program for up to 35,000 four- and five-year-olds in almost 600 schools this September.

A complete list of the selected schools is available at Ontario.ca/EarlyLearning. The program should be fully implemented by 2015-16, with more schools added each year.

Full-day learning is a key part of the government's plan to strengthen education in Ontario and create an even better-educated workforce. It will give our youngest students an integrated day of learning, provide a stronger start for kids and make life easier for busy parents.

This is the government's next step in its education plan, which has reduced class sizes, raised the graduation rate by nine percentage points and added about 100,000 students in universities and colleges.

The Premier was at Victor Lauriston Public School in Chatham-Kent today to make the announcement. It is one of eight schools in the area that will begin phasing in full-day learning this September.

Find out more about full-day learning.

See how full-day learning is part of Ontario's plan to reduce poverty.