"Donna Morrissey" is a Canada/Canadian author.

At age 16 Morrissey left her birthplace, The Beaches, a small outport on the west coast of Newfoundland. She lived in various places of Canada before returning to St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador/St. John's where she studied at Memorial University, where she obtained a Bachelor of Social Work, and a diploma in adult education. Morrissey now lives in Halifax Urban Area/Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Morrissey has written three prize-winning novels — Kit's Law, the national best seller Downhill Chance, and Sylvanus Now — as well as one prize-winning screenplay.

Morrissey defended Frank Parker Day's novel Rockbound in Canada Reads/Canada Reads 2005. Rockbound eventually won the competition. In the 2007 edition of Canada Reads, an "all-star" competition pitting the five winning advocates from previous years against each other, Morrissey returned to champion Anosh Irani's novel The Song of Kahunsha.

More Donna Morrissey on Wikipedia.

Most people are taking it well. They're understanding, they're patient, they understand what the qualifications are -- and the point is to just open the communications.

Just about seven percent of the people who came through qualified for financial assistance because they were out of their homes and sustained significant damage.