Nanny Services

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❁ Many Jobs Available in Vancouver area ❁

Posted by on 06 Jan 2012 | Tagged as: Nanny Job, Nanny Services

Still Looking for a Job? Call us at: 604.298.6633

Many jobs available for Nannies/Caregivers in the Lower Mainland in the following areas:

Nanny / Caregiver Jobs


Childcare and Elder Care

  • West Vancouver – Elderly person is in need of a live-in caregiver. Very good salary offered. Duties: housekeeping only. Starting date: ASAP
  • West Vancouver – Family with three children looking for a live-in nanny. Duties: childcare, housekeeping, meal preparation. Starting date: ASAP.
  • North Vancouver – Family with one baby looking for a live-in nanny. Good salary offered. Duties: childcare as required, housekeeping, meal preparation. Starting date: ASAP
  • Vancouver – Family with 2 children (2 and 5 year old) looking for a live-out part-time nanny. Salary negotiable. Duties: childcare as required, housekeeping, meal preparation. Starting date: ASAP
  • Vancouver – Family with 3 school age children looking for a live-out full-time or part-time nanny. Salary negotiable. Duties: childcare as required, housekeeping, meal preparation. Starting date: ASAP
  • Delta – Family with 2 children ages 1 and 3 year old looking for a live-in nanny. Good salary offered. Duties: childcare and housekeeping. Starting date: ASAP
  • Abotsford – Family with 2 children (school age) looking for a live-in nanny. Salary negotiable. Duties: childcare as required, housekeeping, meal preparation. Starting date: ASAP.
  • Chilliwack – Elderly looking for a live-in caregiver. Salary negotiable. Duties: companionship, housekeeping, meal preparation. Starting date: ASAP.


Send us an Email:
info@paragon-personnel.com

Check our website:
http://paragon-personnel.com

Remembrance Day

Posted by on 11 Nov 2011 | Tagged as: Nanny Services

Remembrance Day – also known as Poppy Day or Armistice Day (the event it commemorates) or Veterans Day – is a Commonwealth holiday to commemorate the sacrifices of members of the armed forces and of civilians in times of war, specifically since the First World War. It is observed on 11 November to recall the end of World War I on that date in 1918 (major hostilities of World War I were formally ended “at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month” of 1918 with the German signing of the Armistice).


The poppy’s significance to Remembrance Day is a result of Canadian military physician John McCrae’s poem In Flanders Fields. The poppy emblem was chosen because of the poppies that bloomed across some of the worst battlefields of Flanders in World War I, their red colour an appropriate symbol for the bloodshed of trench warfare. A Frenchwoman, Anna E. Guérin, introduced the widely used artificial poppies given out today.

In Canada, Remembrance Day is a public holiday in all provinces and territories except Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba.
(According to “Wikipedia – The Free Encyclopedia”)

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