Month: October 2021

Simcoe County’s virtual learners equipped with new tech

The majority of students learning at home have all the tech they need to do their studies, say school board officials.

Both the public and Catholic boards purchased new devices this year in order to assist students

“The board purchased and distributed to schools an additional 996 Chromebooks at a cost of approximately $355,665 since September 2020,” Simcoe Muskoka Catholic District School Board superintendent of business and finance Suzanne Olimer said. “Previous to this distribution, schools responded to requests from their communities by distributing devices that they had in inventory.”

She noted the board continues to purchase new technology to support virtual learning environments and address needs as they arise.

Similarity, the Simcoe County District School Board purchased 8,000 additional Chromebooks to support students in the Learn@Home program, spokesperson Sarah Kekewich said.

“Chromebooks were distributed in the fall to students who requested a device to support their learning. We do not have a wait list of students who require technology,” Kekewich said.

Simcoe County students who didn’t have internet access at home were given devices that had access, through the boards’ accounts.

– With files from Torstar News Service

‘Like somebody is taking away their Christmas’: Thornbury long-term care home’s light display vandalized, items stolen

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the staff at Errinrung Long Term Care and Retirement Residence in Thornbury was looking to spread some Christmas cheer.

Because of the pandemic, they were unable to decorate inside the home, so the staff decided to decorate the outside of the facility.

“If we can’t decorate inside the home, let’s go crazy outside, put up great displays,” said Leanne Haynes, executive director of Errinrung.

She said they had a wide range of lights, trees, woodland creatures and inflatable displays, all designed to brighten up the holidays for the residents and the community. Haynes said the decorations were installed so residents could see them from inside the building.

However, on Dec. 6, many items from the display were stolen, including large animal figures and multiple light-up trees, extension cords and electrical posts. Other items were vandalized.

“It was extremely disappointing and heart wrenching,” she said. “The residents enjoyed it. This has been a really tough year for long term care, and it was something they were looking forward too. It’s like somebody is taking away their Christmas’

Haynes was surprised, as the home had received nothing but support throughout the pandemic.

“It’s really unusual for our little community,” she said.

Some of the decorations remain and while there is a concern the home could be targeted again, Haynes said “we don’t want to take all of our decorations down and forfeit to them.”

The police have been notified and anyone who has information is asked to call the OPP or Errinrung at

Province out of Atlantic bubble until at least January: Furey

While the number of active cases in the Maritime provinces has dropped slightly, Premier Andrew Furey confirmed Monday that Newfoundland and Labrador will continue to opt out of the Atlantic bubble at least until the new year.

P.E.I. decided last week to extend its decision to stay out of the isolation-free zone for the time being.

P.E.I. announced a number of recoveries Monday, bringing its total active cases to 14. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have 88 and 81 active cases, respectively.

Newfoundland announced eight new cases over the weekend, but none on Monday, bringing its number of active cases to 28.

“There will not be any changes to Dr. (Janice) Fitzgerald’s special measures order regarding travel from within the Atlantic provinces. The same goes for the borders in Labrador,” Furey said during Monday’s COVID-19 video briefing, referring to the province’s chief medical officer of health.

The new guidelines mean anyone coming to the province from the region must self-isolate for 14 days. However, they do not need to apply for a special exemption to travel here like those outside the region.

At the southern Labrador border, travellers entering the province must apply for a special exemption.

Furey said local businesses he’s heard from have been largely understanding of the rationale for the move. He said keeping travel-related cases contained is good for both the health of the population and for the economy in the long run.

Meanwhile, Fitzgerald told reporters Monday that she remains especially concerned about the stigmatization of those who either have COVID-19 or are suspected of importing the disease to the province.

Discouraging paranoia and misinformation about COVID-19 has been a frequent theme from public health officials since the beginning of the pandemic.

“I have concerns that people may not come forward for testing out of fear of how they will be treated either in their community or on social media,” Fitzgerald said. “This vilification of people who test positive for COVID, as well as those travelling to our province, needs to stop. It is a significance hindrance to our efforts in public health.”

She asked everyone to use the THINK acronym when posting on social media, which means making sure what you say is true, helpful, inspiring, necessary and kind.

“We cannot take the chance that a mild fever or sore throat is the common cold,” she said. “We can only identify and contain COVID-19 if we know where it is.”

Health Minister Dr. John Haggie added that people shouldn’t view the fact that some cases are still under investigation as “sinister.”

He said some positive tests only become known shortly before the tally is announced, and before a public health worker interviews the person who tested positive.

“Until that interview is complete, we have no real idea about the nature of that exposure or the route by which it may have got to the individual,” he said.

As a further step, he said, the Department of Health will add an extra table to its online pandemic guideline to indicate the status and source of new cases.

Fitzgerald and Furey, meanwhile, pleaded with residents to continue following guidelines and precautions, especially when it comes to seasonal gatherings.

While formal events such as weddings can have as many as 50 people if distancing and other protocols are firmly in place, informal gatherings are different.

Fitzgerald said people should stick to 20 close contacts throughout the entire season.

“You should not attend a gathering with one group of 20 on one night, and an entirely different group on another night,” she said.

Boat launch bust for Innisfil driver

Parking at the Innisfil Beach Park boat launch turned into a costly decision for an Innisfil woman.

South Simcoe police were on patrol in the area Dec. 1 at 9:52 p.m. and approached a vehicle, which was still running.

After speaking with the 57-year-old driver, an officer gave her a roadside breath test, which she allegedly failed. She was taken to the Innisfil police station for further testing.

However, the woman refused, and was charged with failure or refusal to comply with demand. Her licence was suspended for 90 days and car impounded for a week.

Penetanguishene tightens entry to arena and museum

Heeding advice from Dr. Charles Gardner, The Town of Penetanguishene is restricting access to the Penetanguishene Memorial Community Centre and Penetanguishene Centennial Museum.

Earlier this week, Gardner, the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit’s medical officer of health, issued an advisory letter to municipalities strongly recommending they prohibit access to their recreational facilities to anyone whose primary home is within the ‘red’ (control) and ‘grey’ (lockdown) levels on Ontario’s colour-coded COVID-19 restriction framework.

Simcoe Muskoka in is in the ‘orange’ (restrict) level.

In response, Penetanguishene has put in place the following measures:

Penetanguishene Memorial Community Centre: Starting immediately, people who live in ‘red’ or ‘grey’ classified communities cannot enter the arena.

Penetanguishene Centennial Museum: As of Nov. 28, all visitors to the museum must book an appointment to visit, access the gift shop, or utilize the genealogy and history research room. Appointments can be made by calling the museum at or through email at . The museum also asks that all individuals whose primary residence lies within the ‘red’ and ‘grey’ areas not visit the museum at this time. 

For more information about Ontario’s colour-coded COVID-19 restriction framework visit:

‘There is no Team Blue, Orange, Red or Green’: Premier Doug Ford discusses COVID-19 response with party leaders

It’s a sign of the times.

As Ontario’sinfections soar, Premier Doug Ford invited political rivals to huddle in his Queen’s Park office Wednesday to discuss the pandemic response.

“We have the best plan in the country and we are ready to respond as the situation on the ground changes,” Ford told reporters before the meeting with Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, Green Leader Mike Schreiner, and NDP MPP John Vanthof, standing in for leader Andrea Horwath.

“We have the best and the brightest minds working together on this. We have an army of front-line heroes helping to deliver this plan. But we’ll need everyone pulling in the same direction,” the premier said.

After the closed-door 45-minute meeting, Ford’s office called it a “productive discussion” that underscored “the importance of putting partisanship aside during this extremely difficult and unprecedented situation.”

“As the premier has said before, there is no Team Blue, Orange, Red or Green when it comes to the health and well-being of the people of Ontario. He pressed that a Team Ontario approach is crucial in our fight against the spread of COVID-19.”

Del Duca said he was encouraged that Ford agreed with his suggestion that “these Team Ontario meetings between the opposition leaders, premier and senior cabinet ministers should occur on a regular basis moving forward.”

Health Minister Christine Elliot, Finance Minister Rod Phillips, and Dr. David Williams, the chief medical officer of health, were also at the meeting.

The Liberal leader implored the premier “to focus on expanding lab capacity for testing (and) boost … pay for front-line workers in our nursing homes.”

Del Duca’s office said he and Ford “agreed that the pandemic should be the number one priority of all political parties and that more needs to be done to boost Ontario’s economic recovery.”

Vanthof (Timiskaming-Cochrane) pinch hit for Horwath, who had a long-scheduled medical appointment.

“I have a lot of respect for the premier’s office and for the premier,” said the NDP’s deputy chief.

“But he was the one who brought up politics after insisting he doesn’t want to be partisan. He said he likes NDP supporters because they vote for him,” the MPP said.

“I didn’t mention a political party — he did,” said Vanthof.

On Twitter, Schreiner said he “voiced concerns from constituents about the delay in delivering a second wave plan.”

“I urged the premier to meet with the opposition again so we can work through ‪COVID-19 together.”

Robert Benzie is the Star’s Queen’s Park bureau chief and a reporter covering Ontario politics. Follow him on Twitter:

How will COVID-19 affect you? Your postal code matters as much as your genetic code, says Canada’s top doctor

OTTAWA—When it comes to getting hit by , Canada’s top public health doctor says your postal code matters as much as your genetic code.

“Where you live … or where you don’t have a home” is a critical factor affecting health, said Dr. Theresa Tam, as she released a sobering report that outlined the destructive swath cut by COVID-19 across Canada, with worse outcomes in neighbourhoods of cities like Toronto and Montreal, where lower income and racialized workers often don’t have the luxury of working from home, and face worse outcomes from the disease.

Using data from the start of the pandemic to the end of August, Tam said COVID-19 slammed Canada’s socially and economically disadvantaged groups, with seniors, women, disabled people, and immigrant or racialized workers who deliver essential services in health care and agriculture all bearing the brunt of the pandemic.

The 86-page report bolstered Tam’s call for more public health spending, greater co-operation at all levels of government, and for better national health data collection and pandemic preparedness.

Tam said COVID-19 “didn’t create new inequities, it exposed them.”

Among the report’s grim statistics is a finding that 98 per cent of Canadians who died of COVID-19 in hospital had at least one underlying medical condition.

The echoed conclusions by academics, outside researchers and media outlets like the Star which have reported that 80 per cent of COVID-19 deaths in Canada occurred in long-term-care homes for seniors. It cited several factors, including residents’ advanced age, higher prevalence of chronic underlying medical conditions, a lack of pandemic preparedness plans, shortages of personal protective equipment for health-care workers, overcrowding, old infrastructure with poor ventilation, or chronic understaffing in some facilities.

It said more than 10 per cent of national COVID-19 cases were long-term-care workers.

Tam said she wants to be “optimistic” that some of the lessons of the first wave were learned to prevent a repeat of the overwhelming number of seniors deaths in this second wave. However she worried that current numbers show the high number of infections found in younger adults this fall are beginning to “penetrate into” older populations. Not only are outbreaks occurring again in long-term-care homes, but several facilities have had more than one, she said.

Tam said the pandemic hit hard in racialized neighbourhoods, and pointed to a Statistics Canada Wednesday that found communities with the most visible minorities in the country’s four biggest provinces — Quebec, Ontario, B.C. and Alberta — had the highest infection and mortality rates in the first wave. The report said they experienced higher poverty rates, were more likely to live in overcrowded housing conditions and to work in jobs associated with greater risk of exposure to the virus.

In Toronto, the second wave is starting to look like the first wave in some neighbourhoods.

Mayor John Tory said Wednesday that in the past few weeks the number of positive COVID-19 tests has “drastically” increased in the northwest part of Toronto.

He outlined steps the city is taking to expand space for pop-up testing sites in Rexdale and Black Creek, to boost food banks and to support agencies “serving mainly black Torontonians in northwest Toronto, to provide family support, mental health, social connection and community safety services.”

Medical officer of health Dr. Eileen de Villa said her current data shows 30 per cent of people living in Toronto are classified as living below the low-income threshold, but they accounted for 50 per cent of COVID-19 cases.

“Over the course of the pandemic so far, northwest Toronto stood out for higher rates of COVID-19, lower testing rates and higher positivity rates in comparison to other parts of our city.” But de Villa cautioned that “where a person lives is not a reliable indicator of where they got infected with COVID-19. The people of the northwest of the city are like everyone else, as likely to live in one part of Toronto but travel throughout it.”

Tam said the data show the difference in who gets COVID-19 and how severely they are impacted “is not random.” It depends on factors like income, the type of work people do, how many people they live with, and if they depend on someone else for day-to-day living.

COVID-19 is clearly worse for groups such as seniors, workers provide who provide essential services such as in agriculture and health care, for racialized populations, people living with disabilities, and women, she said.

Tam quoted a University of Calgary sociology professor, Dr. Naomi Lightman, saying “the most vulnerable workers provide the most essential services to the most vulnerable clients under the worst working conditions.”

She said Canada needs to embrace a “health equity agenda” that will require sustained efforts “to improve employment conditions, housing and access to social and health services” to better protect people from “health crises, build resilience and create lasting equitable opportunities.”

Tam said nobody can now ignore the reality. “Before it may have been invisible. Now it’s blatantly obvious. And I trust that everybody wants to reverse those kind of trends.”

Tam flagged another parallel public health crisis unfolding among opioid drug users, as the pandemic has disrupted illicit drug supply chains. Tam said the street drug supply has grown “more unpredictable and toxic” and reversed progress that had been made on fighting the opioid crisis.

Before the pandemic, there had been a 13 per cent decrease in opioid overdose deaths in Canada between 2018 and 2019. The report says now, B.C. Ontario, Saskatchewan, and Alberta are reporting record high deaths, with “the situation most stark in British Columbia.” There were more than 100 “illicit drug toxicity deaths” on average for six consecutive months from March to August in that province.

Preliminary data from Ontario show that the number of confirmed and probable deaths from opioid-related causes increased by almost 50 per cent from January to May.

Tam noted at least one supervised consumption site in Ottawa “dispensed with physical distancing measures after several clients overdosed while waiting in line to get in.”

It was not all bleak.

Tam said she sees the pandemic “as a catalyst for collaboration between health, social and economic sectors” and wants to see the kind of intergovernmental and interdepartmental co-operation in place now continue “beyond the crisis and into recovery.” She added “the economic case” for better preparation is “evident,” a dollar spent on public health can save $14 dollars in health care down the road.

Tam took a not-so-veiled shot at decisions made to allow her agency’s own capacity to dwindle, saying the national emergency stockpile and the Global Public Health Information Network — the virus early-warning system that was silenced, had to be strengthened. She said at the Public Health Agency of Canada, “we need to continue to remember this moment in history and why we need those capacities.”

Tonda MacCharles is an Ottawa-based reporter covering federal politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Beausoleil First Nation mourning sudden death of councillor

Beausoleil First Nation councillor died suddenly on Oct. 14 at his Christian Island home. He was 35-years-old.

Monague leaves behind a wife and two children. He is also survived by his parents, three siblings, aunts, uncles, nephews, godchildren and many cousins.

His sudden death has left the entire community in shock.

“I can’t believe you are gone. I will miss your humour, laughing together, family chats on messenger, discussions on how to better our communities, debates and just hanging out,” wrote Marie Norton in an Oct. 14 social-media post. “So young. Too soon.”

Monague had become extremely involved in the Beausoliel First Nation community over the years. In 2016, he was elected to council and served as the youngest member of the community’s seven-member council. He also served as a volunteer firefighter on Christian Island.

“It’s hard to put into words how deep this loss is,” said Lace Copegog in an Oct. 14 social-media post. “I wouldn’t be where I am today without (Hank’s) advice and mentorship … I will truly miss the jokes, the conversations and the good debate.”

As a youth, Monague served on the Ontario First Nations Young Peoples Council. He was a big supporter of youth on Christian Island and impacted the lives of many young Beausoleil First Nation members.

“Another warrior has gone to the spirit world,” stated Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief Glen Hare on Oct. 16. “The Anishinabek Nation recognizes the advocacy and voice of the youth representation Hank provided during his time in the Eshekeniijig Advisory Council.”

Ontario Regional Chief RoseAnn Archibald also offered her condolences.

“With a heavy heart, I would like to send my sincerest condolences to the friends and family of Councillor Hank Monague of Beausoleil First Nation,” said Archibald. “(Hank) was a dedicated First Nations leader in Ontario throughout his lifetime.”

Visitation will be held on Oct. 17 at 1 p.m. at the Christian Island United Church. A funeral service will follow on Oct. 19 at 1 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate donations to Niijii and Christian Island United Church.

New Tecumseth may ban residents from COVID-19 hot spots from using rec facilities

New Tecumseth may ban residents from COVID hot spots from using rec facilities

If you live in a COVID-19 hotspot like Toronto, York or Peel Region and were thinking of making the drive north to take part in a drop-in recreation program, or to get a workout in at one of the town’s gyms, that might not be an option for much longer.

At the Oct. 19 committee of the whole meeting, New Tecumseth CAO Blaine Parkin asked council to provide input on putting a ban in place.

He said the first step would be to restrict these residents from rec programs and the gyms, but further study would be required to see how a temporary ban would affect the user groups and leagues that have members from other municipalities, or play other teams from those areas.

While council supported this proposal, a report will have to be brought back for further consideration before any restrictions are put into place.

Parkin said the town already has a detailed contact-tracing program in place to track everyone who uses the town’s facilities.

Due to the surge in COVID-19 cases, the City of Toronto, Peel Region and Ottawa were rolled back into a modified Stage 2 last week, and York Region was reverted back on Oct. 19.


Bruce Arthur: With COVID-19, pushing to reopen too soon is a loser’s bargain

I hope Doug Ford misspoke. It happens, when you hold a daily press conference for seven months. Because otherwise, on Friday, the premier may have chosen a path.

“Based on the latest evidence, based on what I am seeing in the modelling, I have asked our public health experts to come back next with a plan to begin to ease restrictions in a way that will safely allow businesses to start opening back up after the 28-day period is over,” said Ford, on the hot spots of Toronto, Ottawa and Peel, which have been in Stage 2 restrictions since Oct. 9. “I want the health officials to come up with a plan that lets business operate safely, because we don’t know how long this virus will be with us, but my friends, what we do know is together, we’re going to get through this.”

The engine light blinked yellow on that statement, and maybe red. Of course we want to reopen safely. Everyone wants that.

But the definition of safely is the issue. On Wednesday Ford said “we see the curve going down, which is great news,” but Thursday the government’s public health presentation said the rate of case increases had merely slowed, and that Ontario would only exceed ICU capacity in one of three scenarios, having avoided the worst case.

How could that spur talk of reopening? Twice Friday, Ford was asked what about the data indicated reopening would be warranted; twice, he dodged the question. He kept comparing Ontario to the rest of the world, which when you are jammed between Quebec, Canada’s-worst pandemic, Manitoba’s emerging disaster, and the tragic grease fire of the United States, offers many low bars. Ford was asked, if his much-maligned science and public health advisers come back and say it’s a bad idea — and only Ottawa has shown a per-capita case drop in the last three weeks, and remains high — will he follow their advice?

“Well, anything’s possible,” said Ford. “Again, I’m going to rely on the data and the advice from the health team, but this can’t go on indefinitely. You know, again, one doesn’t work without the other. Without your health, you don’t have the economy. And if the economy goes south, then there’s a lot of people with health issues, mental health, depression, addiction. So there’s a happy balance. So we’ll find that happy balance with our health team.”

Except the pandemic isn’t a balance beam so much as it’s a sequence: public health, then the economy. Ford moved quickly enough on widespread restrictions in the spring, and that was laudable. He has been and to implement in the fall.

Saying we don’t know how long the virus will be with us, and that this can’t go on indefinitely — that points to a desire to open up and hope the hospitals can handle it, and with that is a loser’s bargain. Does Ford want to emulate Alberta, which has stuck with many voluntary restrictions as their cases rise, or Manitoba, which waited too long to act and is now in crisis? This sounds like the talk of a province that didn’t invest enough in public health or epidemic response — whose crashed, and where contact tracing has been half-abandoned in Toronto and Ottawa, among other places feeling the strain.

“He’s right; we don’t know how long it’ll be with us,” says Dr. Andrew Morris, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Toronto, and the medical director of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at Sinai-University Health Network. “But this is why we need an open public discussion about strategy.

“It is possible to move on without controlling COVID? That has to be the first discussion. Is it possible? Is there an example anywhere in the world right now of any country that has been able to do this? Everyone’s talked about Sweden, and now it’s been totally disproven as an approach. So is there another country anywhere in the world where you can just live with this? And the answer is no.

“What’s our strategy? We don’t have a strategy.”

“I think if we’re doing magnificently in two weeks, then try it, see how it goes,” says Dr. David Fisman, an epidemiologist at the University of Toronto’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health. “If it’s a disaster, reverse it. (But) we know what direction that would go, and the downside risk there is you would shut the bars and restaurants after things exploded, as they did in the (United Kingdom) after their Dine Out campaign, and you would potentially also wreck the schools, and wreck the wider economy in the process. So I think it’s a pretty big gamble.”

Fisman noted the locally uninformed kerfuffle over data showing few bars and restaurants had been linked to outbreaks in Peel or Ottawa, but points out that 10 per cent of cases are outbreaks, 40 per cent of cases have a link to some other case, and 50 per cent have no known epidemiological link at all, and that last number is going up. He also notes that the Centers for Disease Control found that unlinked cases are three to four times more likely to have visited a bar, restaurant, or coffee house, or similar.

And finally, Fisman notes Ontario is not immune from what we know about how the virus is spread. Thursday the province’s own medical advisers said the danger of non-essential indoor spaces is well established. And Friday the Star reported an outbreak at Ford’s own constituency office, which he said was the result of visitors coming indoors.

“I was a huge believer in the hammer and the dance,” says Morris, referring to the now-famous description of a pattern of lockdowns and reopenings published earlier this year. “And it’s all bulls—. It’s total bulls—. Nobody’s been able to do it. They thought they could do it, but they can’t. Maybe the Danish, but in September and October they’ve increased restrictions to control things. But no country has the exquisite infrastructure to be able to dance, so instead, the only strategy that seems to work is you keep it as close to zero as possible.”

Ontario certainly lacks the tools to dance, and the footwork along with it. So I hope Doug Ford just got impatient, and was momentarily overcome by his heartfelt devotion to small businesses, about which he speaks more empathetically than about any other part of the pandemic. Because the way he spoke Friday sounded like someone who wanted to open up before the virus is under control. And the world has discovered the hard way that it’s not how it works.

Bruce Arthur is a Toronto-based columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: