Author: shlf

Jim Wilson decision gives Simcoe-Grey Conservatives time to pick new candidate, says president

Jim Wilson’s announcement that he won’t seek re-election in the next Ontario general election has given the local Progressive Conservative riding association the time it needs to find a new candidate, says the riding president.

Wilson, who has been the MPP for the area — first in Simcoe West, then Simcoe-Grey following riding redistribution in 1997 — for 30 years, announced Sept. 24 he would not be seeking the Conservative nomination for 2022, nor would he run as an Independent.

Wilson has been sitting as an Independent MPP since November 2018, after he was removed from caucus by Premier Doug Ford following allegations of sexual misconduct. The results of an investigation have never been released.

Simcoe-Grey PC Association president Simon Ainley said the riding association will be striking a candidate selection committee fairly soon, with the likelihood of a nomination meeting sometime in 2021.

“Because of Jim’s announcement we now have ample time to do our work and to celebrate Jim’s career,” Ainley told Simcoe.com.

Ainley, who has known Wilson for the MPP’s entire time in the Ontario legislature, had high praise for the longtime politician, who also served in various cabinet positions over the years while on the government side, as well as the party’s interim leader in 2014 and 2015.

“In that time, he has never strayed from his prime directive, keeping a laser focus on the needs of his constituents,” Ainley said. “When around him, the discussion always has involved the riding, the latest community issues, what can we do to help — rarely anything else. Jim sits at Queen’s Park today for the same reasons he did when he first arrived in 1990. He never forgets the people who sent him there.”

“Life indeed will go on, but without the steady, caring, dependable political hand that the people of this riding have chosen to send as their representative to Ontario’s Legislature on eight separate occasions. He will be missed.”

The Conservatives have held sway over the area, through various riding configurations, continuously for more than 80 years; Wilson’s time as representative is the second-longest, with Rev. Wally Downer serving as MPP from 1937 until 1975. Downer was succeeded by George McCague; Wilson worked for McCague prior to going into provincial politics.

The next general election is scheduled to take place on or before June 2, 2022.

Daniel Masin seeks Simcoe North Conservative nomination

Another resident has entered into the competition to replace long-time Simcoe North MP Bruce Stanton.

Daniel Masin, a 57-year-old mortgage broker, is seeking the Conservative Party nomination in advance of the next federal election.

“I’m at the stage in my life where I want to give back to the community. I want to make a positive difference,” said Masin, who currently splits his time between Toronto and Penetanguishene. “I love the area. In my heart, (Simcoe north) is where my home is.”

Masin has been involved in politics since the 1970s. He’s campaigned for mayors, MPPs and MPs. After assisting politicians for decades, he finally wants to run for office and “serve the people.”

“As a mortgage broker, we put our clients’ interests first,” said Masin. “MPs put a constituent’s needs or interests first. That’s what they are elected to do – serve the public.”

He will have to get through a process first. Masin will need to be interviewed and secure party approval before he can throw his hat into the ring as an official candidate.

With October only halfway done, Simcoe-Muskoka just broke its monthly COVID-19 case record, health unit says

We’re likely in for a long and sickly month.

The Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit reported an additional 14 confirmed COVID-19 cases Oct. 16, bringing the monthly total to 228 so far. That eclipses the Simcoe-Muskoka region’s previous record of 221 set in April.

“More than one-quarter of the cases reported so far in October are associated with a long-term-care home outbreak in New Tecumseth,” the health unit said in a statement on its website. “There have already been more cases reported in October than any other month since the start of the pandemic.”

That outbreak, at the County of Simcoe’s Simcoe Manor in Beeton, has claimed a sixth victim — a man in his 80s — the health unit says.

Of today’s incidents, six are in Barrie. Innisfil (three) and Bradford, Muskoka Lakes, New Tecumseth, Oro-Medonte and Orillia (one each) also had cases.

The age demographics ranged from the 18-34 to 80-plus categories.

But the source of infection ranged. The Muskoka Lakes case was linked to a school outbreak that is outside the health unit’s jurisdiction. An Orillia woman contracted the virus during travel. And one more Simcoe Manor resident, a woman over 80 years old, is listed today.

The county says the Simcoe Manor case count sits at 38 residents and 22 staff.

Today’s other reported cases are either still under investigation or attributed to close contact.

Since the start of the pandemic, there have been 1,121 confirmed cases in the region — though 954 successfully recovered.

There are 118 active known incidents, including five hospitalizations.

A total of 44 people have died, including 30 at long-term-care and retirement facilities.

There are two ongoing outbreaks at long-term-care sites — Bradford Valley Care Community (two staff infected) and Simcoe Manor.

Also Friday, the Simcoe County District School Board confirmed a COVID-19 case is connected to Tecumseth Beeton Public School. No classrooms are closed and the school is open.

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

NYC has just shuttered its entire public school system. Where is Toronto headed?

Ontario’s premier is warning that hot spots are potentially days away from a lockdown, community cases are soaring, and the education minister has publicly contemplated extending winter break.

But the halls of the Toronto high school where Dieter Hartill works are unusually calm.

All the kids are wearing masks, muffling their speech. While about 80 per cent are still attending in-person classes, only half come each morning as part of the adapted schedule to reduce contact.

“There’s a lot less life,” said Hartill, a guidance counsellor. “The school is a quiet place now.”

A recent string of COVID-19 cases in students at the school “created a lot of fear and concern,” but a full-blown outbreak was avoided.

So far, the apocalyptic spread of COVID-19 in schools feared by many parents and teachers has not materialized. Toronto’s Medical Officer of Health Dr. Eileen de Villa has said schools don’t seem to be drivers of infection.

To date, there have been 1,115 cases in students and staff in nearly 440 English-language public and Catholic schools in Toronto — including 38 outbreaks, according to an independent database maintained by a group of volunteers that includes several scientists and analyzed by the Star.

There are almost 800 schools between the two boards. In the Toronto Catholic board there are about 43,000 students physically attending class and another 22,300 secondary students going to school; in the public board there are approximately 107,300 students in school in elementary and another 54,300 students physically attending high school.

At Etobicoke’s Martingrove Collegiate Institute, where Hartill works, there have been 11 recent student cases, eight of which were linked to an event that occurred outside school grounds; those cases did not translate into an outbreak (defined as two or more cases in the school with an epidemiological link within a two-week period.)

But with community transmission raging out of control, Hartill wonders how long schools can hold out. Recent cases in schools have also been slowly but steadily rising across the province. New York City announced the closure of its entire public school system on Wednesday.

The sad news of the death of a staff member due to COVID-19 at St. Francis de Sales Catholic School in Toronto’s hard-hit northwest corner was confirmed by the board the same day, but was not the result of any outbreak at the school.

“You don’t know what’s happening, especially as the community cases keep rising so much, and it looks like (schools are) going to be the last ones to close,” Hartill said.

It wasn’t that long ago, the end of October, that COVID-19 cases in Toronto Catholic and public schools numbered close to 600. Cases had just begun to appear in Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute in the public board, where an outbreak would later be declared. And there were single cases mounting at Glamorgan Junior Public School, which by then had two cases in students and nine in staff. The school now has a total of 14 cumulative cases.

After days of speculation over whether Ontario schools would close for an extended winter break, and comments from Premier Doug Ford that hinted they might, Education Minister Stephen Lecce said Wednesday it wasn’t necessary after consulting with the Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. David Williams and the Public Health Measures Table.

Asked about the change in position at a press conference Wednesday, Ford said the safest place for kids is in schools.

“So far, knock on wood, it’s working fairly well,” he told reporters, even as hot spots are “staring down the barrel of another lockdown.”

But as it crossed that threshold, officials there announced that the entire public system would be shuttering and moving online.

In Toronto, the weekly average positivity rate — the percentage of people tested for COVID-19 who are found to have the virus — is already 6.2 per cent, with 14 neighbourhoods above nine per cent, according to an by the Toronto-based non-profit ICES (formerly the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Science).

Even if schools are not the drivers, it’s clear some community transmission is making its way into schools. So at what point does it tip over? And how close are we to that point?

Ahmed Al-Jaishi, a London, Ont.-based epidemiologist and PhD candidate at McMaster University, is part of a called COVID Schools Canada that has been tracking every school case and outbreak across the country.

Each report is linked to supporting evidence, such as a school board letter to parents, a notification on the school board or public health website, a provincial report, or media updates. The group’s goal is to increase transparency about risk in schools, a project they started before the

The team found 140 outbreaks within 134 schools across the province, so it’s not like schools are “completely safe,” Al-Jaishi said, but noted we don’t know the full-extent of school-related transmission because some outbreaks are missed (no contact tracing or lack of testing) or not reported.

Given the relatively low number of outbreaks compared to the number of schools in Ontario, closing schools should be a “last resort,” Al-Jaishi said.

“We do need to continue pushing for safer policies, like smaller class size, better ventilation and rapid testing” so that kids who are potentially infected could be removed from classrooms right away, he said.

At a certain point though, if community cases continue to rise, they will make their way into schools and there will be more outbreaks. “It’s almost like game over because we will have to close the school down,” he said, “especially in the hot-spot regions.”

In New York City, the three per cent positivity rate is controversial, with some pushing for the city to accept more risk in schools given their value to parents, kids and society, especially with indoor dining still permitted. Asked what the threshold was for Ontario, Ministry of Education spokesperson Caitlin Clark did not provide one and said the government will continue to follow advice from the Chief Medical Officer of Health and the COVID-19 command table.

“It is crucial that we keep in mind just how important in-class learning is for teachers and students,” said Liz Stuart, president of the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Association. “While teachers are doing everything they can to make remote learning as effective as possible, there is no substitute for in-person interaction between teachers and students, and between students and their peers.”

She noted that there are also concerns about equity, security, privacy, and excessive screen time, especially given the government’s mandate around synchronous online instruction. At the same time “we desperately need (the government) to also acknowledge their responsibility to implement all reasonable safety precautions.”

So far schools have been “remarkably successful at minimizing outbreaks,” Education Minister Lecce said in his Wednesday statement, nixing the idea of an extended holiday break, but added his government will continue to consider “any option” when it comes to schools.

An extended break could provide a buffer between busy classrooms and visiting grandma and grandpa, said Dr. Janine McCready, an infectious disease specialist at Michael Garron Hospital.

“The more introductions that you have in schools, the more likely you’re going to have one of those sparks cause other people to get infected and if you have very high rates, it’s kind of a statistical inevitability that you’re going to have spread,” she said.

While there haven’t been large numbers of outbreaks in schools, she said she worries we may be missing some of the picture. It can be very hard to know where the chain of infection started if, for example, a parent tests positive and then a kid without symptoms does as well — especially when so many kids are asymptomatic.

The province issued a reminder to principals on Tuesday that they are responsible for notifying the province of COVID-19 cases through an online reporting tool. Principals are expected to report cases by 10:30 a.m. every day when school is open.

“It is critical that boards continue to use the absence reporting tool in order to ensure the most up-to-date and accurate information is available,” said Deputy Education Minister Nancy Naylor, in an memo to education unions Wednesday.

While Toronto Public Health is still contact tracing when it comes to cases in schools, it has not yet resumed full tracing in the community. But there is a plan to scale up soon, said Dr. Vinita Dubey, Associate Medical Officer of Health.

Each case of COVID-19 in a school sparks a “detailed and careful investigation” to determine where the person got it and where they may have spread it, she added. “When a case is identified in a school, the school cohort (classroom, bus, after- or before-school program) is dismissed, and often recommended to go for testing.”

McCready agreed with Al-Jaishi that, given the value of schools, they should be kept as safe as possible and kept open as long as possible.

were loosened in October to let kids with runny noses and other short-term symptoms attend without a COVID test. This has resulted in a lot of confusion, McCready said, and should be reconsidered given “out of control” case numbers in the community.

She added that Toronto Public Health should also adopt a policy that if one person in a family has symptoms or exposure, the entire household should stay home while awaiting test results. McCready said she has seen a lot of cases where kids will go to school even when someone in their family is showing symptoms and eventually test positive.

Current TPH guidance states that if someone in a household has symptoms, they should get tested, “but others in the household can still attend school, as long as the person with symptoms was not a close contact,” said Dubey.

There are 24 active outbreaks in Toronto schools and she said there is a “basis to believe” public health measures in schools such as masks and physical distancing are working.

The Toronto District School Board has had 781 cases as of Nov. 16, (623 in students) and (158 in staff) and 26 outbreaks. It approved the spending of $30 million from its reserve funds to lower class sizes and prioritize areas at higher risk for COVID-19, where classes were reduced even further, said spokesperson Ryan Bird.

At the Toronto Catholic District School Board there have been 334 total cases (281 in students and 53 in staff) and 12 outbreaks. Trustee Maria Rizzo said she supports keeping schools open for the sake of students’ mental health, but is “worried.”

She’d also like to see an extended winter break to make sure cases caused by holiday gatherings don’t spread into schools.

The science on COVID-19 so far suggests that kids are more likely to have very mild symptoms or none at all, and very unlikely to get seriously ill or die. The picture on whether they transmit the disease the same way adults do is more muddled. One recent study in further complicated things by finding that three Australian children were infected with COVID-19 but kept testing negative.

de Villa reported that the positivity rate in kids aged 14-17 (7.6 per cent) was higher than younger kids aged 4-13 (4.7 per cent). McCready said high school and middle-schoolers getting together before or after school may be driving some of that.

Anne-Marie King, a Grade 11 and 12 religion teacher at St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School in Scarborough, said she wonders why all classes aren’t online at this point. Her school has seen 11 COVID-19 cases.

“Whatever I’m doing in class where my safety is at risk, I can sit at home in the safety of my house and do online. It’s still interactive, but there’s no physical contact,” said King, who also worries about the health of her 78-year-old mother, with whom she lives.

She said there are rules in place to promote safety, but “they aren’t realistic.” King teaches in a portable where physical distancing is limited to just one metre because there simply isn’t enough space, she said. And, with no running water in the portable, she can’t wash her hands regularly.

King added that many students and teachers are burning out under the pressure to cram the curriculum into a short nine-week period.

Harvey Bischof, president of the OSSTF, said the worry in classrooms is “tipping over” into fear for some teachers as community cases rise.

There is still a need to reduce class sizes to conform to physical distancing rules in every other public space in the province, as well as provincial standards around ventilation, masking and busing,” he said. In October, the Ontario Labour Relations Board dismissed an by the province’s four major teachers unions (AEFO, ETFO, OECTA, OSSTF/FEESO) that sought to establish provincewide standards in these areas.

“I’m grateful so far that any school spread has been by all accounts relatively limited and not the worst-case scenario that we thought could potentially occur. But that said, as we go up to unprecedentedly high levels within the community, that just means introduction into vastly more schools and more chances of these occurrences happening,” Bischof said.

Editor’s note — Nov. 19, 2020: This story was edited to clarify how cases in schools are tracked by COVID Schools Canada.

With files from Michele Henry and Noor Javed

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

Kenyon Wallace is a Toronto-based investigative reporter for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @KenyonWallace or reach him via email:

May Warren is a Toronto-based breaking news reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Distillery District imposes mask rule outside effective immediately

As of Thursday, visitors of the Distillery District will be required to wear masks when they’re taking a stroll outside.

The requirement does not apply to people seated at a table to eat or drink, the shopping district announced in a press release Thursday.

“We did this now primarily because the counts are going up significantly in Toronto,” Distillery Historic District general manager Elena Price told the Star in an interview.

Price said the district’s goal in extending the mask-wearing mandate to those walking outside on its brick-paved streets is to reduce COVID-19 cases while supporting local retailers.

“We’re trying to stay ahead of any directions or lockdowns,” Price said. “Hopefully, if we do this, other people will follow suit and put the same requirements on their own sites that happen to be outside.

“We’ve done a lot of initiatives to support the local retailers that are at the Distillery all year-round and this is a very important time for them.”

The pedestrian-only Winter Village, hosted from Nov. 12 until March 31, has starlit canopies, a Christmas tree already lit and festive music.

Complimentary masks will be available upon request at the security booth, public relations representative Laurie Weir said in an email to the Star. However, there is no enforcement planned for the mask rule, Price said.

“We are in our education stage, and all efforts will be made to communicate to patrons the importance of wearing a mask indoors and outdoors,” Price said. “We are hoping people will respect our policy and help us keep our community safe.”

Throughout the district, there are signs reminding visitors to wear a mask, physically distance, wash their hands and follow public health protocols, according to the release.

Ontario reported 1,210 cases of COVID-19 and 28 deaths Thursday. Locally, there are 361 new cases in Peel, 346 in Toronto and 143 in York Region.

With files from Rob Ferguson

Manuela Vega is a breaking news reporter, working out of the Star’s radio room in Toronto. Reach her via email:

Loblaw raises shareholders dividend but won’t be reinstating ‘hero pay’ to front-line workers

Workers rights advocates and unions blasted Loblaw Cos. after the country’s biggest grocery chain raised its dividend Thursday but continued to resist reinstating “hero pay” for its employees.

Loblaw boosted its quarterly dividend to 33.5 cents per share, from 31.5 cents, after announcing third quarter earnings jumped to $342 million, up from $331 million in the same period last year.

A senior official with the Unifor union — which represents roughly 7,000 Loblaw workers across the country — didn’t mince words.

“It’s despicable,” said Chris MacDonald, grocery sector assistant to Unifor president Jerry Dias. “We have workers going in every day and risking their health at a time when the COVID numbers are higher than ever.”

“It’s absolutely appalling, and is a slap in the face of every single essential worker in the country,” added Deena Ladd, executive director of the Workers Action Centre, an advocacy group in Toronto.

The president of United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1006 A, which represents 25,000 Loblaw workers in Ontario, said the decision to boost the dividend showed a clear double standard.

“Once again we are disappointed that Loblaw has prioritized wealthy shareholders over our members who continue to work hard on the front-line during this pandemic,” said 1006A president Wayne Hanley.

“UFCW continues to call on Loblaw to do the right thing and recognize the contribution grocery workers make, and reinstate the pandemic pay permanently,” Hanley added.

A Loblaw spokesperson said the dividend increase is justified.

“After making the conscious decision to delay any dividend increase through the early part of the pandemic, Loblaw is now returning to its normal business practice. The company remains absolutely committed to its investments in colleague and customer well-being. Any suggestion of profiteering is untrue and ignores the facts,” said Thomas.

In the second quarter, Loblaw had a profit of $169 million, down from $286 million the previous year. At the time, the company said increased spending on protecting the health and safety of its customers was to blame for the decline.

Thomas also defended the company’s decision to end the $2 an hour COVID premium in mid-June after introducing it in March.

“The temporary pay premium, introduced at the height of the panic buying and uncertainty, was never about safety. It was a recognition of extraordinary effort,” said Thomas. “Our stores are now operating at a normal pace, albeit in a new way.”

The company — and executive chairman Galen G. Weston — can still afford to pay the premium, Ladd said.

“Galen Weston is one of the richest people in Canada,” said Ladd.

Unifor’s MacDonald agreed, pointing to an estimate by Forbes Magazine that the Weston family’s net worth has risen to $8.6 billion (U.S.), up from $7 billion (U.S.) in mid-March. Both net worth figures are disputed by the company.

Loblaw announced the $2 per hour COVID premium in March, then along with other major grocery companies, took it away in mid-June.

At the time it was introduced, Weston praised the performance of front-line grocery workers.

“Our supermarkets and pharmacies are performing well,” Weston said in a company statement. “The leaders in our business wanted to make sure that a significant portion of that benefit would go straight into the pockets of the incredible people on the front line.”

Speaking from Cornerbrook, Nfld., where 1,400 Loblaw workers have been on strike for the past 12 weeks, Macdonald said the union has repeatedly asked the company to reinstate the $2 per hour COVID premium that it took away in mid-June.

“We keep asking, and they keep saying no. They had hundreds of millions of dollars in profits this quarter, and they raised their dividends,” MacDonald said.

Josh Rubin is a Toronto-based business reporter. Follow him on Twitter:

Barrie pushed back to yellow under Ontario’s new colour-coded COVID-19 system

Barrie has been downgraded from green to yellow under Ontario’s new colour-coded system for pandemic protection measures after seven new COVID-19 cases were reported in the city Nov. 6.

Under the new system, areas with the lowest case counts, positivity rates and community transmission are in a green category, with the most permissive rules. Red is the “control” level and means returning to modified Stage 2 restrictions, as are seen in Toronto.

Barrie was moved to yellow based on an increase in weekly cases, the speed at which the virus is spreading and how much capacity there is at Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre’s intensive-care unit. 

Five of the seven new cases are due to workplace transmissions, one is still under investigation and the other is due to close contact. The cases involve people aged 18 to 64.

There are currently about 157 active cases in the Simcoe-Muskoka district, with 50 deaths since the pandemic began. Six people are in hospital with COVID-19.

This is what Barrie’s yellow rating means:

• Gatherings are still limited to 10 indoors and 25 outdoors, but the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit strongly advises that people only have close contact with their direct household. 

• Workplace screening questions must take place. 

• Face coverings are required in all indoor public spaces, at workplaces and where physical distancing is not possible. 

• City restaurants and bars have additional restrictions, including closing at midnight, only selling liquor between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m., requiring contact information for all seated patrons, limiting seating to six people per table and limiting the volume of music so people don’t have to shout to hear each other.

• Non-essential travel should be restricted and outings limited as much as possible. 

• Monitor for symptoms and stay home if you are sick. If you have COVID-19 symptoms, get tested. 

The yellow code is known as the “protect level” and means a local health unit will enforce upgraded restrictions for businesses and organizations that remain open.

Health units at this level are required to have a weekly rate of 10 to 39.9 cases per 100,000 people and a positivity rate of one to 2.5 per cent.

“Late for work in Sudbury”: OPP clock vehicle at 176 km-h on Hwy. 400

A 22-year-old driver faces a stunt driving charge after his vehicle was clocked at 176 km-h Nov. 7.

An Orillia OPP officer pulled over the vehicle, which was travelling at 76 km-h over the 100 km-h speed limit, on Hwy. 400 north of Barrie.

The driver allegedly told an officer he was speeding because he was late for work in Sudbury.

“A court date, 7-day license suspension and vehicle impoundment will make you more late,” an OPP Tweet said. “Keep the speed down increases your chance of making it to your destination safely.”

A stunt driving charge is laid if a vehicle is travelling more than 50 km-h over the speed limit.

‘I was extremely offended:’ Tiny Township to denounce racism in response to complaint over Confederate flag

The Township of Tiny is taking a stand against racism.

On Nov. 30, council unanimously agreed that the municipality should make a public statement in support of inclusivity and against racism.

“I personally would like to see a public statement, but I think actions speak louder than words,” said Coun. Cindy Hastings. “We need to think about what we can do, opposed to just say. I think there are ways we can recognize those in our municipality who are maybe subject to racism.”

This summer, the township received an email from a concerned citizen who spotted a Confederate flag in the front window of a home at the corner of Oliver Drive and Fanella Road, just north of Balm Beach. 

“I couldn’t believe what I was seeing,” wrote Reuben Hunter. “I am disgusted that this symbol of racism, white supremacy, and hatred toward minorities is being displayed in the front window for all to see. It is visual hate speech, and I was extremely offended simply by the sight of it.”

Hunter called for action and requested council ban the sale and display of the Confederate flag in the township.

Council briefly discussed the topic on July 6 and requested a staff report outlining the options the municipality could take.

Those options were presented to council on Nov. 30, along with the legal advice that Barriston Law had regarding the exact same issue.

“The township does not have jurisdiction to prohibit the flying of the Confederate flag, as this freedom of expression is protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,” wrote Sarah Hahn, a senior associate with Barriston. “A bylaw passed with the intention of limiting freedom of expression would be quashed by the court for being outside its jurisdiction and found invalid for being in conflict with the Charter.”

Based on this legal opinion, Tiny Township staff recommended that the municipality take the same course of action as Clearview Township and issue a public statement against racism. Staff will draft up a statement and present it to council at a future meeting.

‘I don’t want to close the doors’: Small businesses in Alliston say government not providing enough support

Small-business owners in Alliston who opened their stores at the beginning of the year say they’ve been forgotten when it comes to financial assistance programs meant to help retailers get through the pandemic.

Shamiran Tamras, owner of Tamras Mini Market, a grocery store in downtown Alliston that specializes in Middle Eastern, Mediterranean and Lebanese products, opened her store in February, just weeks before the provincial shutdown in mid-March.

While her store was considered essential, allowing her to remain open during the spring lockdown, she struggled to stay afloat. She is just barely managing to cover her rent, utilities, insurance and other fixed costs.

“Business is very bad,” she said.

Tamras had planned on expanding her business with a bakery so she could sell fresh pita bread, but that plan has been put on hold indefinitely.

While a $40,000 loan she accessed through Nottawasaga Futures has helped her continue paying rent and suppliers, she is burning through the cash quickly.

Rent relief wasn’t an option since her landlord didn’t apply for the program, and while she is applying for the recently revamped tenant rent-relief program, she doesn’t think she will qualify since the application asks for financial information from 2019.

“This is my dream to keep this business,” she said. “I don’t want to close the doors.”

Just down the road, Mohamed Haidary, owner of Alliston Tailoring and Alterations, finds himself in the same situation.

He opened his shop on March 9, about a week before the shutdown. By that time, he had already signed a lease and provided first and last month’s rent.

He wasn’t able to reopen until a little more than two months later on May 19.

“It was very tough,” he said.

During those months, he was still paying the rent, along with the utilities and insurance, without generating income.

Haidary said his landlord also didn’t apply for the rent-relief program, and he didn’t qualify for any business support since his shop had just opened.

“I don’t know what happened to the new businesses,” he said. “They need the support and it’s not only me — there’s lots of other people.”

Alliston Business Improvement Association chair Mike Jerry recently wrote a letter to Premier Doug Ford requesting more support for small businesses.

He also thinks allowing big-box stores in areas that are in lockdown to still sell non-essential items is a flawed” decision, adding there needs to be a fair playing field.

Nottawasaga Futures said 30 businesses impacted by the pandemic have received loans to cover fixed costs and retain 55 jobs. Funding for the loans was provided through the federal government’s Regional Relief and Recovery Fund.

The feds recently provided Nottawasaga Futures a top-up of $1,085,000, which adds to the $994,888.67 provided in May.

For more details on the loan program, visit .


STORY BEHIND THE STORY: Simcoe.com talked to some local businesses to find out how they are planning to get through the next wave of the pandemic and what financial supports they’ve been able to access from the government.