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Fitness degrees - Art restoration degree. Fitness Degrees
McHugh Bluff Stairs for Fitness Do tax-incentives for fitness work? MLA claims they will. May 14, 2008 Tory Calgary, AB MLA Dave Rodney is the first to propose legislation through the vehicle of a bill (2008-05-11) offering a maximum of $1500 tax relief to those who purchase a limited number of eligible fitness-related services. Would a tax credit only push a few people to step away from their screens and go outdoors, the can-but-will-not? read more | digg story Purchasing a club, team or gym membership does not make the buyer physically fit. The same degree of fitness can be achieved on Calgary’s biking, walking and hiking paths and trails. People get fit by choosing to use stairs indoors or outdoors like those at McHugh Bluff. Others keep in shape through paid or unpaid work related activities. How do we monetize their contributions towards relieving Alberta’s ailing medical system? Do we have statistics on the demographics of health-care users specifically as related to income and fitness? Do we have evidence-based research that lack of physical fitness on the part of individual’s is a key component in weakening Alberta’s medical system? Who is driving this bill? Are community members concerned with individual well-being who are not linked to the sports industry (organizations and businesses who monetize fitness) actively engaged in promoting this bill? How will this bill facilitate fitness improvement as part of quality of life issues for city’s most vulnerable populations? Is there any evidence-based research that the the most vulnerable groups, the biggest consumers of public medical system resources, would benefit in any way from a tax-incentive? What percentage of the municipal population who have access to a disposable income required to access pay-per-use fitness activities would find themselves in the tax bracket where this would benefit them? What is the real saving? What are the real costs of this proposed tax-incentive, spread across the broad spectrum of the municipal community, to encourage those few people who have the buying power but not the will, to puchase fitness-related services? Once they have purchased them is their any monitoring device that they would use them? Is there evidence-based research to ensure that those best served by tax deductible fitness-related purchases (those who have disposable income) really require a tax-incentive? If the largest demographic group using health services is a specific income or age group, why not examine ways of reaching that group first by improving universal access to fitness-related courses or memberships by financially assisting those who would-but-cannot because of a price hurdle, then focus on the vague possibility that a tax-incentive might get some people away from their screens and outdoors, the can-but-will-not? After Photo - 19 June 2007 (See Fitness Challege set)
I'm trying to duplicate my Before photo from March. Fitness Challenge. I'm trying to get into better shape. I'm going to post a new pic every three months until I reach my goal. Primary Goal: 8+ miles in less than an hour with 4 degree of incline on treadmill. (Currently 6+ miles in 58 minutes with 0 incline). Secondary Goal: 18' arms/more muscle, less fat. (14'). Long range goal: competitive running in 5K and 10K races. Goal achieved: 32 inch waist. (Was 39') See also: degree on business card life experiance degrees sociology degree job opportunities online master degree health care administration doctor of divinity degree what can i do with a degree in criminology doctoral degrees online master degree in psychology degree bachelor |