Month: July 2021

New cases of COVID-19 within Simcoe County schools

There are new cases of COVID-19 within the Simcoe Muskoka Catholic District School Board and the Simcoe County District School Board. 

St. Joseph’s Catholic High School in Barrie reports two positive cases of the virus. One classroom is closed.

St. Joan of Arc Catholic High School in Barrie has two cases of COVID-19. Two classrooms are closed. 

An outbreak of the virus was declared at Our Lady of Grace Catholic School in Angus on Nov. 12. The outbreak is active. The board reports three confirmed cases and one classroom is closed. 

Monsignor Clair Catholic Elementary School in Barrie has one case of COVID-19. There are no classrooms closed. 

Holy Family Catholic School in Beaverton has two positive cases. Two classrooms are closed. 

There are currently 14 confirmed cases in Simcoe County District School Board schools and facilities.

Boyne River Public School in Alliston has two cases of the virus. Two classrooms are closed. 

Fieldcrest Elementary School in Bradford has one case and one classroom is closed.

Warnica Public School in Barrie has three cases of COVID-19 and one classroom is closed.

Willow Landing Elementary School in Barrie has two cases. There are no classrooms closed. 

An outbreak of the virus was declared at Nottawasaga Pines Secondary School in Angus on Nov. 15. The outbreak is active. There are six cases and five classrooms are closed.

 

Wasaga Beach will back YMCA for six months to keep it in the black

The town will be contributing to the financial fitness of Wasaga’s YMCA.

Council’s co-ordinated committee has recommended the municipality support the Y through its first six months of being open following its lengthy closure as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, to the tune of nearly $50,000.

According to a report from director of recreation, events and facilities Chris Roos, the amount was settled upon following discussions with the Y, and an analysis of the facility’s financial statements by the town’s treasurer.

“We have an accurate model that works within the ceiling of the recommendation ($49,147),” Roos told the committee.

Y officials had initially requested the town provide financial support for its operational budget for the next two years — up to $900,000 — or until the facility reached a break-even point.

Roos said the expectation is the Y should see a return of 50 per cent of its membership by June, which would put the facility in the black.

However, he added, there is no certainty how many Y members — there were 3,300 members of the Wasaga facility prior to the pandemic — might come back.

“It is a much-condensed program offering, and the hours are reduced … but it models against the number of participants they have, so they are in a break-even situation by the end of the six month(s),” Roos said.

The Wasaga Y is expected to open on Jan. 4.

Six people charged after OPP raid seized cocaine, fentanyl and replica handguns from Simcoe County properties

Cocaine, fentanyl and two replica handguns were among the items seized by OPP during a raid Dec. 9.

Members of the central region community street crime unit had four search warrants to take a look around three properties in Barrie and one in Midland.

They also seized other items found during the search, including an amount of Canadian cash.

As a result, officers have charged six people with possession of cocaine and fentanyl for the purpose of trafficking. Other charges include possession of property obtained by crime, obstructing police, possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose

They all have future court dates in Bradford.

Innisfil driver charged after allegedly walking away from crash scene

A 28-year-old Innisfil woman who allegedly walked away from a crash Nov. 28 didn’t get too far without being noticed.

Officers were called to a crash scene on the 20th Sideroad, south of Innisfil Beach Road, at 1:38 a.m. They saw a Cadillac SUV with significant damage, but no driver was nearby.

Other officers were heading east on Innisfil Beach Road at the time and saw a woman walking on the shoulder. They stopped to speak with her and say they detected the smell of alcohol during the conversation. That was enough to make an arrest and the woman was charged with operation while impaired, dangerous operation of a vehicle and obstructing a peace officer.

Her licence was suspended for 90 days and the Cadillac was impounded for a week. She has a future court date.

Chantal Hébert: Erin O’Toole shows he’s no Andrew Scheer in smart Commons debut as Conservative leader

The contrast could not have been more striking.

Mere hours after an American presidential debate that will go down in history for the infamous performance of the incumbent, the five parties in the House of Commons came together to unanimously endorse the latest federal pandemic-related relief package.

That united vote should not be confused with an abdication of opposition duty. It is a reassuring sign that adults are running Canada’s federal parties.

In the lead-up to the bill’s adoption, the Conservatives and the Bloc Québécois had argued vehemently against the Liberal decision to again rush a multi-billion-dollar relief package through Parliament.

The point was worth making. But it did not — at the end of the day — make the content of the bill so fatally flawed that it did not merit support.

Holding up the legislation would have put thousands of Canadian families at risk of finding themselves in financial limbo.

In the midst of a public health crisis, most voters have little tolerance for political gamesmanship and the reciprocal finger-pointing that attends it.

Based on the first round of the new parliamentary session, it is a message that all parties seem to be taking to heart.

Take the Liberals. By all accounts, their latest throne speech was a toned-down version of the ambitious intentions the prime minister had talked about when he prorogued Parliament in August.

If that is because the government concluded that Canadians were not necessarily as hungry for a social revolution as many leading policy activists, the early evidence is that Trudeau’s team read the room correctly.

Polls this week by Abacus and Léger reported a consolidation of the Liberal lead in national voting intentions.

Léger further found that 52 per cent believe the Liberal plan will create jobs and speed up the country’s economic recovery.

That passing grade actually looks pretty decent when one considers it is 12 points higher than the proportion of voters who told the same pollster they would support the Liberals in an election held this month.

Notwithstanding rising public concern over the size of the deficit, there is still a large audience within the electorate for an aspirational progressive agenda.

Trudeau’s Liberals have a pressing interest in hanging on to that audience — and not just so that their minority government survives in the House of Commons.

Fear of the alternative, in the shape of Stephen Harper and Andrew Scheer, played an essential part in Trudeau’s two election victories.

That fear drove a critical number of progressive voters who otherwise might have preferred to support the NPD or the Bloc to the Liberals.

It’s early days but Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole looks like he will be harder to paint with the same brush as his two immediate predecessors.

On the way to supporting the speech from the throne and ensuring the survival of the Liberal minority government, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh was able to claim he wrestled two key concessions from the government.

By demanding changes to the financial relief package rather than attacking a throne speech the New Democrats could have written themselves, Singh managed to carve a place for his party in the parliamentary dynamics.

If the recent New Brunswick provincial campaign and the ongoing one in British Columbia are any indication, voters’ appetite for the stability that majority rule is on the rise.

Given that, Singh cannot waste any opportunity to demonstrate that minority rule offers the NDP leverage it can put to constructive use.

O’Toole’s first appearance as party leader in the House was delayed by COVID-19. On Wednesday, he wasted no time in signalling that the official opposition is under new management.

His maiden speech sacrificed partisanship to substance and the result was a solid performance.

And then it is hard to think of the last time the Conservatives, in opposition, opened question period by pressing the government on Indigenous reconciliation.

On the national day of remembrance for the victims of Canada’s residential school system and against the backdrop of the disturbing fate of Joyce Echaquan, the Quebec Atikamekw woman who was subjected to racist slurs by hospital staff even as she lay dying earlier this week, O’Toole’s choice of topic could be construed as a no-brainer.

Except that under its previous leader, the Conservative party did not always let larger realities get in the way of its partisan game plan.

To wit, on the day the World Health Organization officially declared the COVID-19 pandemic, the official opposition left the task of questioning the government about its emergency readiness to the other parties so as to focus on a push to reopen the SNC-Lavalin file.

For those who see partisan politics as a blood sport, one that requires someone to lose for someone else to win, this was a pretty poor week.

The rest of us can only hope the three main federal parties stay on their current game.

Chantal Hébert is an Ottawa-based freelance contributing columnist covering politics for the Star. Reach her via email: or follow her on Twitter: @ChantalHbert

Growing pains: New Tecumseth ponders interim control bylaw for cannabis operations

New Tecumseth may be putting a temporary freeze on applications related to the production and cultivation of cannabis in order to study the issue further and come up with a set of land-use policies.

At the Sept. 28 committee of the whole meeting, council voted in favour of passing an interim control bylaw for cannabis operations, but the decision still needs to be ratified at a special meeting set to take place Oct. 1.

Council voted on the recommendation after discussing the issue in camera.

Prior to the closed-door discussion, council heard from longtime area resident Mark Manning, who talked about his plan to build a small greenhouse on his 16-acre property to grow recreational cannabis.

He said the cost of going through the site-specific bylaw process to make it legal would be too expensive, noting it would cost around $20,000 in order to prepare the studies for the town.

“Throwing roadblocks in front of community members doesn’t help anyone,” he said.

Director of planning Bruce Hoppe said the intention of the interim bylaw is to “hive off” the cannabis issue from the zoning bylaw review that is currently underway and about three quarters of the way from being completed.

He said the cannabis review would take about a year to complete and the public would have an opportunity to provide input. Once the study is done it would come back to council with recommendations.

Ward boundary review a no go

The majority of council is not interested in revisiting a contentious issue that came up during the previous term of council.

A motion requested by Deputy Mayor Richard Norcross to have the town hire an outside consultant to conduct a review of the town’s ward system and reduce the number of councillors to an odd number was turned down in a 5-4 vote.

The last review, conducted in 2016/2017, was done by council and staff, not an outside consultant as some had requested. The 10-member council did not reduce the number of seats,

The review was conducted after residents launched a petition requesting the wards be evened out to accommodate growth, and for council to be reduced to an odd number of councillors to eliminate the possibility of tied votes.

Collingwood’s financial health ‘robust,’ says mayor as council begins budget deliberations

Collingwood councillors are aiming to maintain 2020’s tax rate into 2021, and avoid an increase for residents put under financial pressure thanks to the coronavirus pandemic.

Any increase in operational spending at town hall should be limited to two per cent over last year and tied to any increased assessment in 2020, based on an earlier direction given to staff by council in September.

“I hope we can come in (without a tax increase), understanding the COVID pandemic has put a lot of stress on our municipal budget; it’s put a lot of stress on our residents, so we want to make sure that we are able to meet their needs with no tax increase,” Mayor Brian Saunderson told Simcoe.com, before council’s strategic initiatives committee reviewed some of the numbers at its Oct. 7 meeting.

The town’s overall financial health is fairly robust, said the mayor, with its financial position over the last seven years swinging from a position of being $7.5 million in the red, to more than $34 million in the black.

That includes the $18.5 million realized from the sale of the regional airport and the town’s share of the electricity utility, but also takes into account $8 million in liabilities representing the grain terminal.

The town has also decreased its debt position from $35 million in 2015 to around $20 million at the end of 2019, after the previous council adopted a ‘pay-as-you-go’ philosophy. That means not taking on any new debt in an effort to decrease the carrying costs of the town’s existing debt to seven per cent of its revenue.

That number currently sits at just over eight per cent.

However, said Saunderson, council could consider taking on debt for projects that have a lifespan over several generations of residents.

“It makes sense, in some respects, to incur longer-term debt to pay for assets that will be used three generations from now,” he said. “To make the current generation pay for everything, which is the effect of pay-as-you-go, is an inequitable distribution of the cost of an asset.”

The town’s dedicated reserve accounts are quite healthy, he emphasized, and currently sit at more than $64 million. In terms of cash and short-term investments, the town is sitting on $124 million. In both cases, the town is sitting well above the provincial benchmarks.

However, holding the line on the tax rate for 2021 doesn’t necessarily mean the town won’t be collecting more from taxpayers. As part of this year’s budget discussions, councillors will consider adjusting the special capital levy from .75 per cent to two per cent; the average residential taxpayer pays a levy of $17, and increasing it to the level recommended by former treasurer Marjory Leonard in her final report to council would hike that to $43.

Council will carry on its budget discussions in November.

OPP charge driver alleged to have damaged traffic light in Midland

A 21-year-old Tiny Township driver faces six charges in connection with a collision that took out a Yonge Street traffic light on Oct. 24.

Southern Georgian Bay OPP were called to the intersection at Fourth and Yonge Streets around 2:15 p.m., after a trailer being pulled by a pickup truck flipped over and took out a traffic light. 

The tandem-axle trailer, loaded with machinery, rolled over and struck the traffic light post, knocking it to the ground. A small amount of diesel fuel was spilled during the incident and the road was blocked off for several hours.

On Oct. 30, police announced that the driver of the pickup truck would face six charges. These charges include: careless driving, driving a commercial vehicle with an improper licence, driving a vehicle with a defective breaking system, pulling a trailer with no permit, failing to operate a commercial vehicle within the permitted weight, and failure to surrender an insurance card.

According to Andy Campbell, executive director of environment and infrastructure for the Town of Midland, the damaged traffic light is going to cost about $8,000 to repair. The town will bear the cost of fixing the light, but could be reimbursed by its insurance company.

Simcoe Muskoka health unit reports 75 new COVID-19 cases over the weekend — yes, that’s a record

COVID-19 had an awfully reproductive weekend in the Simcoe-Muskoka region.

On Nov. 2, the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit reported 75 new laboratory-confirmed cases of the virus, in the first public update of statistics since Friday. This is the highest weekend jump in numbers since the start of the pandemic.

Of the new incidents reported, 23 are in New Tecumseth. Bradford (15), Barrie (12), Innisfil (eight), Ramara and Tay (three each), Clearview and Collingwood (two each) and Adjala-Tosorontio, Essa, Gravenhurst, Penetanguishene, Tiny and Wasaga Beach (one each) also had cases. The municipality of residence is still pending for one incident.

Ten people are 17 years of age or under. Two fall into the 80-plus demographic.

One case, a Barrie boy 17 years of age or under, is linked to an educational setting outbreak. The health unit could not confirm Monday the specific facility linked to this incident. However, this kind of outbreak occurs in either a childcare centre, college, university or elementary, secondary or trades school. The affected individual may also be listed by the health unit, even if the outbreak happens outside its jurisdiction. 

Two incidents (an 18- to 34-year-old Barrie woman and a 65- to 79-year-old Clearview man) are connected to workplace outbreaks; one (an 80-plus Gravenhurst woman) is associated with an institutional outbreak.   

The health unit says there have been 1,429 total cases in the region since the start of the pandemic — though 1,166 successfully recovered. Six people are currently hospitalized.

Fifty residents have died, including 34 in long-term-care and retirement facilities.

An outbreak was declared at Waterford Retirement Community in Barrie Monday. Outbreaks are also ongoing at three long-term-care and retirement facilities — Beeton’s Simcoe Manor, Alliston’s Riverwood Senior Living and Gravenhurst’s Granite Ridge Retirement Facility.

The Simcoe County and Simcoe Muskoka Catholic district school boards also reported several cases linked to their facilities in recent days. Tay Shores Public School in Victoria Harbour closed two classrooms after two people connected to the facility tested positive.

Innisfil Central Public School is reporting three incidents. Hillcrest Public School in Barrie has been linked to one case; a classroom has been closed as a result.

On Nov. 1, Tottenham’s Father F.X. O’Reilly Catholic School and Alliston’s Banting Memorial High School were each linked to a single case. Banting closed a classroom as a result. 

Also, an outbreak is ongoing at Bradford District High School, where three people are infected and two classrooms have been closed.

All of the aforementioned schools remain open.

For more information on the local effect of COVID-19, visit .