Author: shlf

Public Health Agency releases ‘final update’ into onion Salmonella outbreak in Canada that has left hundreds sick and dozens hospitalized

The Public Health Agency has released what it’s calling it’s “final update” into a salmonella outbreak in Canada caused by onions.

The outbreak, the Agency says, “appears to be over” and the “outbreak investigation has been closed.” Onions imported from the United States are no longer under investigation since salmonella illness linked to this outbreak have “significantly decreased” over the last three weeks.

Since mid-summer, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) collaborated with federal and provincial public health partners, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to investigate an outbreak of salmonella infections that occurred in seven provinces, including Ontario.

“Given that Salmonella illness reporting linked to this outbreak has significantly decreased over the last three weeks, the outbreak appears to be over and the investigation has been closed,” the Agency said in a statement/

The investigation’s findings identified “exposure” to red onions imported from the USA as a likely source of the outbreak,

In total, there were linked to this outbreak in the following provinces: British Columbia (121), Alberta (293), Saskatchewan (35), Manitoba (26), Ontario (14), Quebec (25) and Prince Edward Island (1).

Individuals became sick between mid-June and late-August 2020.

Seventy-nine individuals were hospitalized, the Agency said, and three people died, but salmonella did not contribute to the cause of these deaths.

Individuals who became ill were between 1 and 100 years of age. The majority of cases (54 per cent) were female.

“Individuals who were ill reported eating red onions at home, in menu items ordered at restaurants and in residential care settings,” the statement said.

Onions grown in Canada were not associated with this outbreak, the Agency added.

Rosie DiManno: Growing up is a torment at the best of times, never mind in times like these

Coming of age in the epoch of the coronavirus is a bummer.

Just when young adults are starting to spread their wings, exploring independence, punching through the parental bubble wrap, they’ve been stuffed back into infantilizing stasis.

The sheer fun of salad days has been smothered by a pandemic. When they do venture out in youth packs, cue the lectures and shaming. Because that’s always worked so well, yes?

Hard to be a rebel without a cause — the essence of angsty young adulthood — when you’re fingered for causing community contamination, bringing COVID-19 into the household, knocking off your grandparents. As London, Ont., Mayor Ed Holder berated last month, amidst positive case counts that climbed to levels not seen since the spring, scores linked to off-campus partying by Western University students: “You are going to kill someone.”

And turn down that godawful music while you’re at it.

No graduation ceremonies. No proms. No campus activities. No concerts. No moshing. No hangin’ out — except maybe at the mall, idly. Which fortunately is at least one popular time-waster not yanked back to forbidden in Ontario hot spot municipalities. Kingston has approved new fines for anyone hosting off-campus house parties, Queen’s University even threatening to expel students who do so.

Browbeating does not change behaviour.

“There are so many milestones that we have lost, like graduation,” says Em Hayes, a youth engagement facilitator at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health who is pursuing a masters in teaching. “Going back to school has been very challenging. I’m exhausted talking to a computer screen all day. I miss my community although most of us are also finding new ways to create communities.

“You don’t realize how much it meant to be in the physical presence of others until it was taken away.’’

Little wonder that mental health — anxiety segueing to depression — is cause for acute concern among pulse-takers of the youthful demographic in Canada.

“The pandemic and its restrictions are uniquely impacting young people because it impacts their developmental milestones and tasks right now,” says Joanna Henderson, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, who is extensively involved with mental health initiatives for children and youth at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. “It doesn’t take long as adults to forget what it was like to be 16 or 18 or 20.”

Growing up is a torment at the best of times. These are the worst of times.

“They’re wired to be engaging socially, to be moving towards autonomy, to be learning, to be securing employment,” Henderson points out. “All of those things are being impacted by the pandemic and their restrictions. We have young people who are living by themselves, completely alone, and it may be the first time that they’ve moved out on their own. So, extremely difficult circumstances to cope with. And we have other young people who are in very close multi-generational homes in small dwellings who are experiencing tremendous economic stress.’’

But see a photo on social media of teenagers enjoying a bush party and BOOM — public health officials, politicians and online nags go berserk. How selfish. Of course they’re selfish. Show me a young person who isn’t self-absorbed. Traditionally, that’s why we cut them slack — because they’re not yet mature and conscientious.

Data shows more people in their 20s have tested positive for COVID-19 than any other age group. As of Oct. 16, 18.5 per cent of positive cases related to people aged 20 to 29 across Canada, 11.6 per cent among those 19 and under. The upside, doubtless due to their prevailing good medical health, is that they account for just 3.1 per cent of hospitalizations, the second lowest age bracket.

“My observation is there’s a focus on the 18-35 year old age range because we’re seeing increased rates there,” Henderson continues. “That is sometimes expressed in judgmental ways and I have concerns about that because the places that opened up during Stage 3 were places where young people are commonly employed and residences in universities, places of predominantly young people.”

Young people who, according to various studies and polls, are experiencing anxiety and depression, as high as a 20 per cent increase in that cohort.

“We haven’t given as much guidance as we need to on how to make those complex weighing of different places, how to respect the fact that we have young people out there kind of on the front line of our economy reopening,” says Henderson. “Recreation and partying is part of the story but certainly not the whole story. It’s easy to say stay six feet apart and wear a mask. But in actuality, we have pretty conflicting messages circulating right now about what’s important in our communities, in our economy, and how we’re expecting all people, including young people, to move forward.”

What Hayes describes as “the vagueness of the rules that are put out there.”

Henderson: “These are moments of interactions and transactions that are happening. It’s really incumbent on decision-makers and adults to communicate clearly and realistically if we actually want our messaging to resonate with young people.”

Considering that half the world’s population is younger than 30, this demographic has hardly any say-so in how COVID-19 is being targeted and the extent to which for-the-good-of-everybody restrictions are screwing up their lives. There is, for example, no youth voice at the “experts” table that Premier Doug Ford is all the time citing. There isn’t even a young people’s table, as is common at those Thanksgiving gatherings we harangued into not having last weekend.

“Young people need to be at the table in these conversations because they’re experts in their own lives,” says Henderson. “Meaningfully at the table, not in a tokenistic way, where they can share their expertise.”

The tenor of the demographic was reflected in the results of a survey led by Henderson in her capacity as executive director of Youth Wellness Hubs Ontario, a government-funded initiative to transform youth mental health services in the province. The one-stop-shop model has been implemented in 10 communities across Ontario thus far, though virtually because of the pandemic. The cross-sectional survey was conducted with 622 youth participants, which allowed for open-ended answers, included both young people who’ve already connected with mental health services and those who hadn’t.

The result revealed a “statistically significant” deterioration of mental health across the clinical and community samples — 68 per cent of youth in the clinical sample and 39.9 per cent in the community sample met screening criteria for an “internalizing disorder.” Perhaps surprisingly, substance use had actually declined in both cohorts since the pandemic struck (as of May data), although 23.2 per cent of youth (clinical) and 3.0 (community) could be described as having a substance use disorder.

As the survey concluded: “Among youth with histories of mental health concerns, the pandemic context poses a significant risk for exacerbation of need. In addition, youth may experience the onset of new difficulties.”

These are the years, from teens to mid-20s, when mental health issues often manifest themselves.

What’s most impressed Henderson, however, are the coping mechanisms that young adults are seizing upon to mentally and emotionally survive the pandemic, without scars.

All kinds of different strategies, from journaling, to engaging with art, to meditation, to exercise, to gardening and, of course, connecting on virtual platforms such as Instagram, including livestreamed events.

One Hub community, in a particularly economically disadvantaged area, collectively secured food donations, created an online cooking course — teaching each other — and made food baskets for distribution.

“That’s not what we would conventionally think of as mental health services. However, it was very enriching for young people’s mental health in the context of skill-building, the sense of being engaged in a productive activity, supporting their families and connecting with the community.”

There was, in fact, a subset of the young adult community surveyed that reported improved mental health during the lockdown. “People talked about the stress of being so busy, having that alleviated. We heard about the relief from school-specific stressors, varying forms of, ‘I didn’t realize how stressful my life was until I’ve been forced to take a break.’”

Many also reconnected more deeply with families. Prior to the pandemic, how many teens really wanted to hang out with mom and dad?

Occasional folly notwithstanding — young people throughout history view themselves as indestructible, no matter the safety warnings drummed into their skulls — they get it, they get COVID-19, they get masking and physical distancing. But the coronavirus has robbed them of so much in their waning days of innocence.

Says Em Hayes: “Youth understand the gravity of the situation.”

Rosie DiManno is a Toronto-based columnist covering sports and current affairs for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

These 7 Ontario stores were selling ‘dangerous’ sex enhancement products

Health Canada has either seized or asked owners to remove sexual enhancement products from seven convenience stores across the province this week, as the products “are labelled to contain or have been tested and found to contain dangerous ingredients.”

Ingredients such as tadalafil and sildenafil, which are found in the majority of the products listed from Ontario, should only be used under the supervision of a healthcare professional and can cause dangerous and potentially life-threatening side effects for those taking nitrate drugs, or anyone with heart problems.

Other side effects of these two ingredients include headaches, facial flushing, indigestion, dizziness, abnormal vision, and hearing loss.

Yohimbine, another ingredient found in some of the products, can cause serious effects for people with high blood pressure, or heart, kidney or liver disease.

Testosterone compounds, found in one product, have also been linked to fatal health risks.

The following products were seized at the locations below as of Oct. 21:

A & J Variety (324 Rawdon St. Brantford, ON)

Product: Rhino 15 gum (contains tadalafil)

Lucky’s Variety & Coin Laundry (81 Stanley St. Brantford, ON)

Product: Rhino 69 Platinum 35000 (contains tadalafil)

Dundas West. Convenience (5449 Dundas St. W, Etobicoke, ON)

Product: Black Panther Extreme 25000 (contains sildenafil and tadalafil)

Product: Elephant 9000 (contains sildenafil and tadalafil)

Product: Wild Bull Gold Extreme (contains sildenafil, tadalafil and testosterone propionate)

Product: Rhino 69 Platinum 35000 (contains tadalafil)

Dairy Jug (3884 Bloor St. W Etobicoke, ON)

Product: Rhino 25 Titanium 200K (contains sildenafil)

Hoffman Mini Mart (124 Hoffman St. Kitchener, ON)

Product: Black Panther (contains yohimbe)

Product: Maximum Power Bang All Night Long (contains sildenafil)

Product: Rhino 7 Platinum 5000 (contains sildenafil and yohimbe)

Stop 2 Shop (101 Hazelglen Dr. Unit 3A, Kitchener)

Product: 3800 Hard Rock (contains yohimbe)

Big Bear Food Mart (159 Highland Rd. E., Kitchener)

Product: 3800 Hard Rock (contains yohimbe)

Health Canada advises anyone with these products to discontinue use and to consult a healthcare professional with any concerns.

For further information, visit .

Penetanguishene correctional officers not looking to ditch OPSEU

The province-wide movement by correctional officers to leave the Ontario Public Service Employees’ Union (OPSEU) and create their own autonomous union isn’t garnering much backing from employees at the Central North Correctional Centre in Penetanguishene.

“There is some minimal support locally,” said Richard Dionne, president of OPSEU Local 369, which represents staff at CNCC. “However, it is not supported by the OPSEU Local 369 executive.”

Thousands of corrections workers across the province are reportedly fed up with OPSEU. They have enlisted the assistance of the Confederation of National Trade Unions and are trying to create the Ontario Association of Correctional Employees (OACE). This new organization is aiming to establish a corrections-only association that will advocate and fight for the specific needs of Ontario’s correctional employees.

“Those pushing for the change in unions believe they have been misrepresented or under-represented by OPSEU,” said Dionne.

OACE has until Dec. 30 to raid members from OPSEU. In order to be recognized as a bargaining agent by the Ministry of Labour, the new union would need at least 40 per cent of OPSEU’s correctional membership. 

Coco’s Cookies brings a sweet treat to Orillia’s West Street

Nicole Hepinstall learned to bake under the guiding hand of her late grandmother.

“She taught me everything she knew,” Hepinstall said. “She taught me all her little secrets.”

But it wasn’t until a pandemic-related layoff from her job as a receptionist and makeup artist at a local hair salon that Hepinstall decided to pursue the sweet side of commerce as a full-time business.

The result is , where cookies and bars are specialties of the house, along with garlic-cheddar biscuits, doughnuts, muffins, and buns.

“There are certain things that are definitely bestsellers that have a reputation, for sure — double-chocolate macaroons and s’mores cookies,” Hepinstall said.

Gluten-free and vegan options are available.

Hepinstall previously sold baked goods as a side business before venturing into the bricks-and-mortar operation.


TYPE: Bakery

LOCATION:

OFFERINGS: Cookies, squares, biscuits, and more.

HOURS: Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Friday from 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.

PHONE:

‘Ongoing investigation’: Pet hedgehogs linked to salmonella cases in Ontario

Public Health authorities have linked pet hedgehogs to dozens of salmonella cases across Canada, including four in Ontario.

There are 32 cases in Canada, up from 11 early last month in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Quebec.

In its ongoing investigation, The Public Health Agency of Canada has found that individuals who became ill with salmonella reported having had direct contact with a hedgehog prior to the illness. The pets were reportedly purchased from a variety of places, including pet stores, breeders and online, and investigators are looking to determine whether there is a common source.

The agency recommends Canadians practise good hand hygiene when handling hedgehogs during this period of time and reminds citizens that hedgehogs can be carrying salmonella even if they appear to be healthy.

Other tips include the following:

• Do not consume food or drink, or touch your mouth, while handling a hedgehog.

• Do not kiss or snuggle with a hedgehog.

• Always wash your hands thoroughly after touching a hedgehog or any items or food that they come into contact with.

• Do not keep hedgehogs around children younger than five and always supervise children who are playing with a hedgehog.

• Make sure to clean surfaces the hedgehog touches with soap and water, and wash any clothing with the warmest water possible.

• Do not bathe hedgehogs in kitchen sinks or bathrooms.

• Keep hedgehogs and their items in a separate environment.

• Note that stressful environments can cause hedgehogs to shed salmonella.

Salmonella symptoms in humans include fever, chills, diarrhea, abdominal cramps, headaches, nausea and vomiting, and last about four to seven days.

For further information, visit 

‘Litany of malfeasance, misdirection, greenwashing’: Collingwood councillors comment on judicial inquiry findings

For the first time since Associate Chief Justice Frank Marrocco issued his report on the Collingwood Judicial Inquiry, members of council had the chance to comment on his findings.

Deputy Mayor Keith Hull was a member of the council from 2010 to 2014 which sold the former Collus utility and built the two recreational facilities that eventually led to the inquiry.

“The council of the day and key senior individuals failed the community,” he said at the Nov. 16 council meeting.

Marrocco made hundreds of recommendations for the town, as well as the province, in hopes of improving transparency for municipal governments.

“I think we know and have known for years that we have operated within a system that has too far great (amount) of latitude to allow for things that have transpired in the town of Collingwood,” he said. 

Since 2013, the OPP have been investigating the issues discussed in the inquiry and Mayor Brian Saunderson said that investigation is ongoing.

Hull said he was interviewed by the OPP in 2013.

“I am hoping for all concerned that at some point the provincial police come forward with a conclusive statement so that we as a community can move over and the cloud and the shadow that still cover this community can finally be lifted and move onward,” he said. 

Perhaps the most passionate member of council was Mariane McLeod, who was working as a journalist at the time of the sale. She said the entire report is a finding of wrongdoing.

“Not just a finding of wrongdoing but a litany of malfeasance, misdirection, greenwashing, greed, enabling, wilful ignorance, a coverup and just general shenanigans,” she said.

McLeod was not pleased with the $7-million cost, but put the blame on those involved and said the town would “still be paying, had we not done this.

“I would beg that we never again let the good old boys prevail,” she said. 

Coun. Steve Berman said the findings send a message to anyone who thought the inquiry wasn’t necessary.

“For anyone who said or maintains that this was nothing but a witch hunt, I think Justice Marrocco’s own words show, that sometimes, there are in fact witches out there,” he said. 

Why talking about COVID-19’s ‘comorbidities’ is so controversial

As the head of a small congregation in rural Saskatchewan, Bradley Robertson hears his fair share of community chatter about COVID-19 — from those who fear the virus, to those who say it’s all blown out of proportion.

He always thought it was important to use his platform to encourage others to keep themselves and their neighbours safe from the virus. When his sister got sick with it back in Vancouver, the threat became all the more real.

“There are those who are saying: Why are we placing such a big deal on this?” Robertson said. “And I’m thinking, the numbers have been low, because we’ve been mostly responsible. Now they’re on the rise again.”

“As leaders, we have to take responsibility.”

The disagreements Robertson noticed are happening all over the country, with some escalating into widespread and emotional debates over our lives, personal responsibilities and the role of government in reigning in the pandemic.

That’s what has happened in the case of Alberta’s reporting on comorbidities, an issue that comes layered with the kind of nuance that can be in rare supply during an emotionally charged national conversation during a pandemic.

Comorbidities are pre-existing health conditions ranging from high blood pressure to cancer.

In Alberta, comorbidities appear to have made 98 per cent of the 575 people who have died from COVID-19 more vulnerable to the disease.

Last month, the province began listing comorbidities alongside its .

Ontario and B.C. have not followed suit.

Experts agree this is crucial information to know, to reveal more about the toll the coronavirus pandemic is taking on society, and to help plan when it comes to things such as distributing vaccines to at-risk groups.

However, the question of comorbidities has also fuelled a narrative that has led some Canadians to question the need for severe public health measures to limit the spread of COVID-19 within the general population.

And that narrative has public health officials concerned.

The thinking, promoted by commentators and Twitter users in Alberta and across the country, goes something like this: When we look at the COVID-19 death data, the vast majority of people who have died have some kind of comorbidity. Those without comorbidities appear to be at far less risk (of death, although far less is known about the long-term effects of COVID-19). So, some of those people without comorbidities should be able to make personal choices to accept the risk of getting COVID-19, and do things like keep small businesses open, and socialize with loved ones. One commentator has repeatedly referred to only 10 “otherwise healthy” people in Alberta dying of COVID-19.

Public health experts and leaders have contested this in no uncertain terms, with the federal health minister calling it a “dangerous” way of thinking. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said last week in the House of Commons that a storyline distinguishing between protecting people with comorbidities from the rest of the population “downplayed” the seriousness of the pandemic’s losses.

The complicating factor is that, while this narrative is concerning to public health officials, it is not based on falsehoods. Comorbidity data does, in fact, paint a picture of parts of the population that are at much greater risk of death than others.

So is it dangerous to focus on comorbidities?

“Severe outcomes are not limited to just those who are at the very end of their lives, and it is a mistake to think so,” Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s chief medical officer of health, said in a daily update last month.

“Over half of men over 50 in Alberta have high blood pressure.

“That should not be a death sentence.”

A Saskatchewan-based blogger tweeted about the release of comorbidity data in Alberta, calling it a “cynical effort to somehow minimize or diminish these deaths.”

The tweet received support from high-profile public health experts in Alberta, including Dr. Lynora Saxinger, who co-chairs the province’s scientist advisory group on COVID-19.

Patrick Saunders-Hastings, a University of Ottawa epidemiologist, said the dangers of highlighting comorbidities lie in the way the information is communicated, not the facts, themselves.

First, there’s the risk of downplaying the deaths that have occurred by suggesting, even implicitly, that they were not as attributable to COVID-19 because of the accompanying risk factors.

That’s not true, because it was COVID-19 that killed these people, not their comorbidities.

Then there’s the issue of the message the emphasizing of comorbidities sends to those feeling apathetic about the pandemic and its restrictions.

“There have been challenges around the communication of risk profiles as it relates to individual responsibility,” Saunders-Hastings said.

“We have seen younger and healthier population groups who have been less willing to comply with (public health orders and recommendations).”

On the extreme ends of that non-compliance are events such as the Calgary last weekend, which saw hundreds of Albertans take to the streets, in defiance of public health orders, to protest public health restrictions. Or the now well-known case of Adam Skelly, who kept his Etobicoke barbecue restaurant open, despite public health orders, before being shut down.

Even comparatively minor flouting of the rules, such as going to visit a few friends and their house, is misguided, Saunders-Hastings said.

“The risk cohorts that have been identified related to COVID-19 are so broad that, even in those younger, otherwise healthy, groups, most people would have interaction with people with those risk factors,” he said.

Comorbidities for COVID-19 deaths in Canada include high blood pressure, dementia, and diabetes, all fairly common conditions.

Advanced age is also a known risk factor for severe COVID-19.

That means practically everyone in the population is in contact with someone who has a comorbidity, even if they do not have any themselves.

For many Canadians, it’s a deeply personal topic.

“I hear from Canadians, they call me to talk about a family member who has an underlying condition and they’re concerned,” said Colin Furness, a University of Toronto epidemiologist. “There’s emotional pain there.”

When Lethbridge MP Rachael Harder shared a Toronto Sun column to her Facebook page, quoting the line about only 10 “otherwise healthy” COVID-19 deaths, the backlash was swift. Almost 1,000 comments followed the article, and most appeared to be people criticizing the MP for a lack of sensitivity toward those hundreds with comorbidities who died in her province.

She edited the original post with more quotes from the column, saying it’s important to protect the most vulnerable in the pandemic.

“At the end of the day, I’m simply posting an article that presents to the Canadian public the stats,” Harder told the Star. “The stats show who the most vulnerable are.”

She repeated the same thing when asked whether she thought her post promoted the view that focusing on comorbidities could encourage those not at risk to argue for fewer restrictions.

Robertson, the pastor in Eastend, Sask., is from the same area as Harder, and said he was one of the people disappointed by the thinking Harder seemed to promote with her Facebook post. He said he was glad to see her update the original post with what he thought was more compassion for those at risk.

“At the time, my sister was going through treatment in a Vancouver hospital for COVID-19 and she was touch-and-go for getting intubated,” Robertson said. “I felt that those numbers were being dismissed. It’s almost feeding the people who are saying ‘this is all nonsense’ about the pandemic.”

In his small town, Robertson says he comes across people who feel differently about the measures to stop the spread of COVID-19; some are more supportive of the measures than others.

“I try to encourage others who are listening to think about people who are vulnerable, so, even if you don’t agree, or, even if you think you’re not at risk, still wear a mask and follow the rules,” he said.

Reporting on comorbidities is an important piece of the puzzle, especially as we approach a vaccination phase of the pandemic.

“Understanding that we will not be able to vaccinate everyone right away … we would need to make these prioritization decisions,” said Saunders-Hastings. “And that’s in these at-risk groups.”

“That’s not to dismiss the risk of younger and otherwise healthy individuals, but we have a need to allocate those resources to health workers and people at risk of transmitting to high-risk individuals,” he said.

Vaccines are expected to begin arriving in Canada in early 2021, with about three million doses expected in the first three months, in a population of about 38 million people.

Alex McKeen is a Vancouver-based reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Toronto’s Catholic board expands outdoor learning pilot project to eight more schools as other boards keep an eye on the results

Under a large, white wedding-style tent set up in the field of St. Jerome Catholic School, a group of kindergartners are learning French.

“What is the colour of the ground?” the teacher asks the 15 kids in French immersion, struggling to make her voice heard beyond her mask and the background noise from students taking “fresh air breaks” in the nearby lot of the school near Keele Street and Sheppard Avenue West.

The students yell out colours in French. Some jump up and down while doing so. Others move around their chairs. Some just sit and take in their outdoor surroundings on a crisp fall day.

“This is a space that can be used for teaching or a place where teachers can take a fresh air break if it’s raining,” said principal Rocco DiDomizio.

“We are going to encourage teachers and classes to be outside as much as they can, at least once or twice a week,” he said, adding that each tent can hold up to two cohorts, with a divider between them.

The Toronto Catholic District School Board launched the tent pilot project for this school year, putting up large tents in fields or lots at 10 schools in areas deemed high risk for . If it goes well, the board plans to put up eight more tents at schools across the city as part of Phase 2 in the coming weeks.

The pilot, which will cost the board $100,000 for the next four months, is aimed at giving teachers and children a safe alternative to being inside a stuffy classroom given COVID-19 is not believed to be as transmissible outdoors.

Other school boards such as , Hamilton and Halton have also been experimenting with outdoor classes. And medical experts in the Sick Kids on school reopenings suggested educators “should be asked to assess and incorporate outdoor learning opportunities as weather permits.”

Around the globe, countries have experimented with the idea, with reports of classes in Denmark heading to local cemeteries where kids learn math using dates on gravestones.

In the Halton District School Board, Suzanne Burwell — the board’s environmental sustainability specialist — said while the board has for years focused on outdoor learning, this year it has made a concerted effort “to take learning outside, to provide outdoor space for students,” and that will continue throughout the winter.

“It’s not just taking the same lesson and going outside, sitting on a chair outside … it’s making it experiential education,” she said, adding that this year schools have had to get particularly creative. High schools are using bleachers or football fields as classroom spaces; some have moved stationary bikes outside for gym classes “or are accessing local trails off-site.”

“We had a school that transformed sections of the track into pickleball courts,” she said. “Kids were repurposing the same space in a different way each time.”

In many schools, there is an expectation that every student will learn outside for a portion of the day, Burwell said, whether it be gym, science or reading.

The Toronto District School Board, the country’s largest, “encourages outdoor learning as much as possible and we know schools are already coming up with creative ways of doing this. It will vary from school to school depending on what works best for that particular school or individual class,” said spokesperson Ryan Bird.

“With regard to the use of tents, while we are looking at what other boards are currently doing, we have a number of concerns including overnight security of tents and area, their limited use as the weather gets colder, limited resources when it comes to caretaking time and funds, and equity of access across the system: while some schools and/or school councils may be able to afford tents, others may not,” he said.

Across Ontario schools, some 876 COVID-19 cases have been reported among students, teachers and staff since the first day of classes.

At a Friday news conference — as the province announced stricter rules in Toronto, Peel and Ottawa — Adalsteinn Brown of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto said the lowest source of outbreaks has been schools.

But the Toronto public board’s lack of leadership on outdoor schools has been frustrating to many parents, including Jessica Greenberg, who says she reached out to the local superintendent’s office in August to get direction.

She says the office “assured me that he was supportive of outdoor learning and our efforts to create safe outdoor spaces, but that at the time he and the TDSB were not in a position to really say or do anything.”

“It was recommended that we become a model and example for other schools across the TDSB,” says Greenberg.

In response, Greenberg started the SaferOutsideTO Facebook group in early September to connect with other school communities. “From the beginning it has felt essential that all advocacy efforts be citywide so that any school community wanting to engage in outdoor learning could have equal access to resources, information and expertise,” she says of the Facebook group.

She also began working with parents and teachers to facilitate outdoor classes at the Grove Community School, an alternative school within Alexander Muir public school on Gladstone Avenue, where her two children are in grades 3 and 5.

Many of the alternative school’s classes are now taught outside.

“Our kids are outside almost all of the time because we have an extraordinary group of teachers who have been leading this, who are committed to this,” said Greenberg.

But when parents tried to put up tarps last week in preparation for rain in the forecast, they were told to take them down. Greenberg says they have also been told they can’t use donated tables.

“The city really came together and said we need to protect bars and restaurants … we’re going to take over the streets. Every weekend the Lake Shore is shut down so people can bike. Those initiatives are wonderful,” said Greenberg. “But nobody is considering doing anything like that when it comes to schools and our students. And they are the last priority.”

In a letter to parents this week, Alexander Brown, chair of the Toronto public board and a trustee in Willowdale/Ward 12, said staff are talking to their Toronto Catholic counterparts to see if they could launch a similar project.

“We have also taken steps to negotiate greater access to city parks, marked physically distant circles at elementary schools and provide opportunities for classes to spend time outside in their cohorts,” wrote Brown.

In the letter, the TDSB said it is concerned about issues of liability, safety, and equity for schools and families that don’t have the means to fundraise.

That’s why the pilot project in the Toronto Catholic board was based on serving priority areas first, said Ward 9 Trustee Norm Di Pasquale, noting that the funding came through the federal government.

“We’ve given it first to schools in the COVID hot spots,” he said. “And those are the most underprivileged places in our city, so it was kind of a no-brainer to start there.”

The board will likely assess the data to see if the project is one worth keeping: “We’re trying to see how much extra work it is for custodians, for teachers … seeing if French class works better outside; which classes work, which ones don’t,” he said.

“How does it work when the weather shifts? How does it go in the rain, a windy day, a snowy day? We’re really trying to collect everything that there is to know about the experience under the outdoor tents.”

Noor Javed is a Toronto-based reporter covering current affairs in the York region for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Patty Winsa is a Toronto-based data reporter for the Star. Reach her via email:

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Court hears fight over homeless camps in Toronto’s public parks

The tensions between the city of Toronto and residents of homeless encampments that have increasingly sprung up during COVID-19 were laid bare in a virtual courtroom on Thursday.

The hearing was for an injunction, which — if granted by Judge Paul Schabas — would stop the city from dismantling encampments in public parks during the COVID-19 pandemic.

An injunction would override the city’s ability to issue trespass notices under its parks bylaw to encampment residents. As it stands, the bylaw prohibits camping in municipal parks.

The city is asking for the injunction request to be dismissed, claiming that granting it could lead to a drastic increase in the number of encampments across city parks.

No decision was delivered Thursday, with Schabas noting his decision may take a few weeks.

The applicants in the case — former and current encampment residents, the Toronto Overdose Prevention Society and the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty — argue that involuntarily displacing encampment residents puts them at risk of psychological and physical harm, as well as increased risk of COVID-19.

“The city’s shelter system has not proven to be a safe alternative in terms of risk of exposure,” the applicants said in court documents.

As of Thursday afternoon, five cases of COVID-19 were reported in shelters across Toronto.

The city pushed back against the idea that its shelters are unsafe, arguing that more than 80 per cent of confirmed COVID-19 cases among shelter residents were in April and May. In its view, it took “extraordinary measures” to reduce the risk of COVID-19 in the shelter system.

While lawyers for the applicants acknowledged the city’s efforts in recent months, they also presented other arguments for allowing encampments to stay during the pandemic.

Encampment setups alleviate stress and uncertainty for homeless individuals, they argued in court materials and during Thursday’s hearing, by providing consistency in where they can get their meals, relieve themselves, charge cellphones and sleep each night.

They applicants’ lawyers also presented encampments as a place for more consistent access to pharmacies, safe consumption sites and medical care. The loss of those routines, they said, would be “profoundly destabilizing.”

“For some homeless people, the city’s shelters and specially acquired hotel spaces and temporary apartment units may be an acceptable alternative to congregate shelter spaces,” they said. “For others, however, these spaces have not met their needs. They may be far from people’s communities, the services they rely on, and the routines that they have established.”

The city said it believes indoor spaces are safer. In written materials, it argued that encampments pose “serious dangers” to residents, city staff and the public.

“The city has made a policy decision to invest its scarce resources in making safer indoor spaces available to as many people as possible, rather than building infrastructure to support living within parks.”

The city cited complaints to staff from members of the public, reporting fear walking near certain parks with encampments.

The city also raised the matter of fire hazards from generators or fuel tanks near tents, noting that one person died in an encampment fire this spring. The applicants countered that the death wasn’t in a city park, but under Mount Pleasant Road. It was easier for fire services to monitor encampments in city parks as they were in plain view, they argued, making the case that encamped people were generally cooperative in cases of concern.

Another point of tension is whether encampments have led to increased violence. In its submitted materials, the city pointed to incidents of guns being seized, alleged assaults by and on encampment residents, and an alleged sexual assault at George Hislop Park.

The applicants say the city only identified three instances in city parks where charges were laid for items found in tents — and that at George Hislop Park the encampment resident was a victim, not a perpetrator.

An injunction wouldn’t prevent the city from working with encampment residents in order to find indoor alternatives, the applicants said. The injunction sought only to “ensure that these efforts are not backed by the threat or use of coercive force.”

They acknowledged the city had been able to “drastically” reduce the size and scale of encampments through outreach, communication and negotiation — but claimed that for some of the encampment residents, a central factor in them refusing indoor alternatives was a “lack of communication and loss of trust” with the city.

Victoria Gibson is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering affordable housing. Her reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Reach her via email: