Returning Customer needs only recent paystub
|
|
As New Customer you fill Easy 1-2-3 steps form
|
|
|
| |
1. Fulfill the requirements:
- Working more then 3 months
- Having checking account and personal checks
|
|
| |
2. Apply ONLINE or visit us
|
|
1. Easy Complete Online secured form
2. Sign the agreement and send us pay stub
3. Receive email with instructions to withdraw money in 1 hour or get money directly into your account next day.
|
1. Complete the form online or by phone and get pre-approval
2. Prepare the necessary documents:
a. Bank statement (last 10 transactions).
b. Recent Paystub
c. Any bill to prove residence.
|
| |
3. Walk-in to sign and get cash
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Few facts about Greater Sudbury
Greater Sudbury Airport is one of Northern Ontario's busiest and is currently served by Air Canada Jazz and Bearskin Airlines. Six daily flights to Toronto by Air Canada Jazz provide North American and overseas connections. Regular scheduled flights provided by Bearskin Airlines offer air service to other major centres such as Ottawa, Sault Ste Marie and Thunder Bay. Most of Northeastern Ontario's smaller communities receive regular airline service from Sudbury.
The Sudbury Airport Community Development Corporation was formed and assumed ownership and governance of the airport following the transfer of the facility from Transport Canada under the National Airport Policy on March 31st, 2000. The Board of Directors now oversees the affairs of the airport with the mandate to improve the quality of air transportation services and to market the airport as one of the economic development engines of the community.
The Transportation Services Division provides safe, reliable and affordable transportation services to 3.7 million passengers each year. Public transportation services contribute to the social and ecological health of our community by removing geographic barriers to employment and social services opportunities and by reducing the environmental and infrastructure costs of transportation. Public transportation includes both conventional transit and the transportation of persons with physical disabilities.
The city's Census Metropolitan Area consists of the city proper and the First Nations reserves of Whitefish Lake and Wahnapitae, and had a population of 158,258 in the 2006 census. Informally, some residents of the area may also consider the metropolitan area to include the towns of Markstay-Warren, St. Charles and French River, a region commonly known as Sudbury East.
Municipal responsibilities were distributed between the council of the Regional Municipality and the councils of the individual towns and cities. The region covered 2,607 square kilometres.
The municipally-owned energy utility Greater Sudbury Hydro serves the city's urban core, while rural areas in the city continue to be served by Hydro One. An ongoing and controversial proposal that Greater Sudbury Hydro take over responsibility for all electrical power distribution in the entire city has been a significant political issue in the 2000s.
Outside of the region, the name Sudbury is still commonly understood to refer only to the former city of Sudbury, with the outlying communities often believed to remain distinct from the city. Some of the outlying communities, for example, still retain their own distinct postal and telephone exchange codes, and for several years after the amalgamation residents in many rural parts of the city still could not call other rural parts of the city without incurring long distance charges — Bell Canada did not expand local calling area service in the city until December of 2007
|