Category: wbqxg itihe

Birthday cards delivered to Sarah Hamby, a Beeton girl fighting cancer for the fifth time

The birthday celebrations started off with some sirens and a truck full of cards and gifts for 12-year-old Sarah Hamby.

The Beeton girl is battling her and a simple request for some cards from family friend Leila Paugh has turned into a huge project for Norfolk OPP Const. Ed Sanchuk.

He put the call out for people to help make Sarah’s birthday special, and people around the world responded.

“She’s a warrior,” Sanchuk said as he delivered the cards just after noon Dec. 5. “We couldn’t have done this without the generosity, the spirit of giving has been overwhelming.”

Hamby had already received 200 cards, but Sanchuk said there were a thousand more he was dropping off.

“I guarantee you, you’ll be opening cards until next year,” he said.

‘Immediately stop using’: Numerous well-known wipes products sold in Canada recalled due to infection fears

Health Canada has issued a large recall of numerous wipes products sold in Halton region and across Canada due to a possible contamination that could cause infections.

The involves Cottonelle & Cottonelle GentlePlus Flushable Wipes products. The company reported that more than 2 million units of the affected products were sold in Canada.

“Some of the recalled products may have the presence of a common household microorganism, Pluralibacter gergoviae,” Health Canada said in a statement. “Pluralibacter gergoviae rarely causes serious infections in healthy individuals. Individuals with weakened immune systems, who suffer from a serious pre-existing condition, who have been treated surgically, or belong to another sensitive group of persons are at an increased risk of infection if they use the contaminated product.”

The affected products were sold from February 14, 2020 to October 7, 2020, Health Canada said.

As of October 7, the company has received no reports of incidents or serious injuries in Canada.

“Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled product and dispose of it,” the Health Canada recall states, adding buyers should contact Kimberly-Clark (the distributor) for a refund and for information on disposal.

The affected products were sold at many stores, including Costco.

Here is one of the recalled products but there are others:

North Simcoe artists have struggled throughout pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has been tough for everybody, and artists are no exception.

Cynthia Blair, a Tiny Township painter, was planning on attending 12 shows throughout 2020.

Instead, Blair was only able to attend one — The Bay Studio Tour. The popular event, which showcases artists and artisans throughout Midland, Penetanguishene, Tiny and Tay, managed to hold a scaled-down event in early October.

About 200 people masked up and visited Blair’s studio over the course of two days to view her work, which is her preferred way to do business.

“Online is good, but I think art needs to be experienced in person,” said Blair. “There is an endless supply of art online. It’s easy to get overwhelmed.”

However, with the majority of art shows cancelled, Blair has been working to expand her online presence. She’s recently started to promote her work.

“This year, it’s important for artists to be online. You’ve got to get your work out there,” said Blair. “I am using social media in a much more concentrated way now.”

Along with having a ton of extra time to paint, the pandemic has given Blair the ability to focus on branching out online and improving her website .

While she was able to adapt, some local artists aren’t too adept at social media.

“There are a lot of artists who count on shows every year. Without them, you don’t get the sales that you normally would,” said Blair.

One of those artists is Midland’s Sylvie Huntley.

Huntley, who works with alcohol ink on ceramic tile and resin, was gearing up for an extremely busy 2020. Then the pandemic ruined her plans.

“I had 26 events booked. I was going to be branching out of Simcoe County for the first time,” said Huntley. “I had shows booked in Parry Sound, Muskoka and down in Niagara Falls. All 26 were cancelled.”

These cancellations were a huge blow to Huntley’s business. She isn’t too proficient at using social media to market and sell her work, and mostly relies on craft shows and festivals.

“My projected sales are down about 80 per cent; that’s based off how I did last year and where I was going this year,” said Huntley. “So, my revenue has almost entirely gone toward purchasing art supplies.”

In order to continue selling her work, she took the necessary steps to safety open her home up to interested patrons. 

“I’m keeping it positive,” said Huntley, who is known online as the . “By not having shows, I was able to spend a lot of time painting and learning new techniques.”

Huntley created 13 new paintings this year. She has taken those paintings — most of them picturesque views of Georgian Bay — and transferred them to coasters, trivets, scarves, place mats, calendars and more.

All of these products are featured in a pop-up studio in her living room. She will be taking appointments through to Dec. 6.

To contact Huntley, call . 


STORY BEHIND THE STORY: The COVID-19 pandemic cancelled the majority of area craft shows and events. So, reporter Andrew Mendler decided to check in with local artists regarding the impact of those cancellations.

A Taste of Soul brings sounds and flavours to Simcoe County

Originally from Texas and a fan of southern cuisine, Gwyn Beaver was a bit disappointed with the food options when she first moved to Canada 16 years ago.

“We lived in Montreal and I started making southern cooking for colleagues,” Beaver said. “It was down-home cooking like cornbread, fried chicken, candied sweet potatoes, Hoppin’ John — a black-eyed pea dish — collard greens, jambalaya, gumbo, sweet-potato pie, pecan pie and pickled okra.”

Some of them said it was so good, she should open a business.

Beaver knew she wanted to name it , but Quebec rules dictate the title has to be in French.

“I didn’t want to change the name,” she said.

Fast forward to 2018, when Beaver and husband Shawn Pitre moved to Wasaga Beach.

“I was ready for a change. I’m a performer and what I’ve always wanted to do is music and food,” she said.

So, she got a business licence and started doing A Taste of Soul pop-up dinners for friends.

“It was like hiring a personal chef for the evening. I would bring everything: the choice of two entrees, two sides and two desserts. And I would clean up.”

Then the pandemic hit and Beaver wasn’t sure where to turn.

Someone suggested she offer virtual cooking classes.

And Pitre, who studied ethnomusicology, was on board to teach musical tidbits during the class.

“Jambalaya is known as much as a dish as a song,” he said. “There are something like 300 different versions in different languages around the world. It was an easy fit — I’ve already done a ton of research on this.”

“It’s a great way to be entertaining and educate people,” Beaver said. “People say they love this type of food, but don’t know anything about the culture.”

And the origins of music or food have more connections that we sometimes realize, she said.

The Jambalaya 101 class uses vegetables, rice, spices of salt, pepper, paprika, and a protein like crawfish, shrimp, chicken or tofu.

And with plenty of snowbirds already familiar with corn bread or fried chicken, making a Jambalaya or gumbo isn’t too challenging, Beaver said.

The hardest part about it is making the roux, which is a paste made from flour.

“It’s time consuming. So while people are cooking with us, that’s when you can open the wine,” she said.

Beaver also uses OfficeInc! Corp’s Food Opportunity Resource Kitchen (FORK) in Barrie to prepare a monthly lunch for pickup in the city, called Sunday Soul.

For more information about A Taste of Soul, visit their  or visit .

A TASTE OF SOUL

TYPE: Southern entrees and dessert

PHONE:

HOURS: Sunday Soul or virtual class by appointment

WEBSITE: 

First COVID-19 vaccine could be approved in Canada next month — on similar timeline to U.S.

A first could get Canadian regulatory approval by mid-December, officials said Thursday — putting this country on the same timeline as the United States.

Any vaccine must get the green light from Health Canada scientists before being rolled out in this country, and doses won’t be shipped here , Public Services and Procurement Minister Anita Anand had said last week.

The review process has already begun.

Health Canada’s chief medical adviser, Dr. Supriya Sharma, says federal scientists have been working closely with officials from the United States and Europe, and expect to reach a conclusion around the same time.

Of course, much is riding on the analysis of results, but officials from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are currently reviewing the Pfizer vaccine candidate and a meeting with independent experts is , which, if successful, could pave the way for an emergency use clearance by midmonth.

“We’re basically looking at the same data packages, we have very similar authorization pathways that are available for public health emergencies,” Sharma said, adding that Pfizer is also furthest along in Canada.

“We’re expecting to make a final decision on the vaccines around the same time as both the U.S. FDA and the European Medicines Agency.”

If that timeline holds, it’ll be a validation of a new approval process that Canadian officials developed in the wake of the global pandemic specifically to speed up the availability of things that might treat COVID-19.

Review of new drugs can often take the better part of a year, so the government created what’s called an interim order, which came into force in September. It’s the equivalent to the emergency-use approval granted by the FDA, but while the Americans have handed out hundreds of speedy approvals, Canada’s process only saw its first approval last week.

The temporary system a product last Friday, with a nod for an antibody therapy made by U.S. pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly.

The government has ordered 26,000 doses of the therapy, which has shown promise in reducing hospitalization and emergency room visits for patients with COVID-19, with the first batches to be delivered in December.

The order allows the government to do things such as prioritize the review of anything related to COVID-19, and do what are called rolling submissions, in which companies report their results to the government as they do their testing, instead of waiting until the very end of their process to hand over data and test results. Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca have all begun the rolling submission process.

Canada and the U.S. may be working on similar approval timelines, but questions about who will actually get initial doses .

Federal officials have long said that the first window for vaccine deliveries is the first quarter of 2021, though Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott appeared to call that schedule into question Wednesday, saying she no longer had a guarantee that vaccines would be delivered then.

“This is very concerning,” Elliott told reporters. “It’s really incumbent on the prime minister to stand up for Canada.”

Federal officials are standing by their initial timeline, saying that five out of the seven advance purchase agreements, which are still dependant on a vaccine being approved, have been finalized.

Premier Doug Ford said he would raise vaccine deliveries with Trudeau during the weekly call with other premiers.

“We have a lot of questions to ask,” he added. “When and how much and what types. … We can’t be last in line around the world.”

Ford said Canada should have the facilities to make vaccines under licence to ensure a supply, given the “massive” pharmaceutical industry here.

“We have the know-how. There’s nothing we can’t manufacture here.”

Experts have said that Canada doesn’t currently have enough capacity to manufacture vaccines, particularly the Pfizer and Moderna candidates that employ new mRNA technology, which is why Canada has locked down deals to have doses delivered, rather than buying the licence to manufacture them here.

With files from Rob Ferguson

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

The contrast could not have been more striking.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

OPP looking for man who walked into Hockley store wearing black trench coat, possible gun strapped to chest

Nottawasaga OPP officers are looking for a man who allegedly walked into the Hockley Valley General Store with what appeared to be a gun strapped to his chest.

Police said the incident happened Saturday, Nov. 7, around 12:30 p.m. at the store located at

Police said the man, who was wearing a black trench coat, purchased some food items and left. At no point was anyone threatened with the firearm.

The suspect is described as a Caucasian man between 30 and 40 years old, approximately five-foot-nine with a medium build and brown hair with a distinct bald patch. He was last seen wearing the black trench coat and a white and blue medical mask.

The gun is believed to be a revolver with a white handle.

Anyone with information on this suspect can call the OPP at or Crime Stoppers at .

Toronto’s plan for shelters for the first winter of COVID-19 includes more beds, warming centres — and plastic barriers

Toronto unveiled its shelter plan Tuesday for the first winter of COVID-19, replacing the former Out of the Cold program with hotel beds, introducing new warming centres and putting plastic barriers in double occupancy hotel rooms and at a respite site on the CNE grounds.

In all, the plan calls for 560 new spots: 150 new hotel program beds; 100 beds at two modular sites scheduled to open in November and December; 120 units for women on Church Street, scheduled to open by early December; and 100 beds in the CNE respite site.

There will also be 90 hotel beds specifically in lieu of Out of the Cold, the program that provided overnight shelter in a variety of locations in previous winters. That program has been deemed unfeasible due COVID-19 guidelines.

The plan increases the number of spaces for available to Toronto’s homeless through the winter for the fifth year in a row, the city said.

Some outreach workers expressed concern that the plan leaves the city with fewer shelter beds this winter compared to last, pointing to the loss of roughly 1,000 beds from sites being forced to reduce their capacity to adhere to pandemic distancing rules.

Mary-Anne Bédard, general manager of Toronto’s Shelter, Support and Housing Administration, said that the loss was mostly in temporary refugee beds, which haven’t been in as high demand with current border restrictions.

The city will have more beds available this winter for single individuals than it had in the middle of last year’s cold season, she said, “where the majority of the pressure is in our system.”

Bédard said that will be the case even taking into account the increase in beds mid-way through last winter from 485 new spots to more than 600.

Greg Cook, an outreach worker with Toronto’s Sanctuary Ministries, still believes the increase won’t be “nearly enough” to handle the pressures this winter — especially if the opening of the modular construction sites are delayed.

One piece of welcome news to homelessness advocates was the increase to four warming centres this winter instead of one. Street nurse Cathy Crowe said it was “badly needed,” and expressed hope that they would provide hot meals rather than options like coffee and granola bars. “The people coming in here are going to be the most vulnerable,” she said.

Bédard said meals would be provided in shelter, respite and hotel sites, and that the warming centres would provide people with warm beverages and snacks.

Having more warming centres was partly triggered by the loss of Out of the Cold sites that were more spread out across the city, Bédard said. People living in encampments outside the downtown core are thought more likely to come inside on the worst winter nights if they don’t have to travel to the central part of the city to access a warming site.

Two of the warming sites have yet to be finalized, but Bédard said the city was looking at spaces in North York and Scarborough. The other two will be downtown.

Several outreach workers believe Tuesday’s plan doesn’t include adequate protections for encampment residents.

“They need to help fortify the encampments, help with fire safety plans, help with getting food and warmth and supplies,” said Kimberly Curry, executive director of the charity Seeds of Hope. “I know that’s a tricky thing for them because they’re supporting something they already deemed unsafe, but people have to survive.”

Throughout the pandemic, the city has said that indoor spaces are safer than the encampments that have increasingly sprung up in public parks and other areas — an assertion being .

Tuesday’s plan says that street outreach staff will hand out blankets and sleeping bags to people staying outside, but only during extreme cold weather alerts.

Providing supports exclusively in the worst weather puts pressure on non-profits and groups like the Encampment Support Network, Crowe said.

Crowe also raised concerns with the use of the plastic barriers between beds, saying that they could create a false sense of security.

She also worries about the 100-person occupancy of the planned respite at the Better Living Centre on the CNE grounds, and said she doesn’t believe double occupancy should happen in the hotel programs except for couples.

Sanctuary’s Cook agreed: “If they’re going to open up anything new, it needs to be one person per hotel room or permanent housing.”

Bédard said some encampment residents who either shared tents or had been living close to one another had specifically asked whether they could move into hotel rooms together.

“We want to really be able to acknowledge the importance of social connection during a time when it’s very stressful and there’s a lot of extra anxiety. People move into rooms and feel further isolated from their family of choice … that can have consequences for mental health,” Bédard said.

Concerns had also been raised about individuals using drugs alone, she said — in the shelter hotels especially — with no one around to intervene if they overdosed.

As , the city believes that 16 deaths connected to the shelter system between January and August were overdoses — including nine that took place in July alone.

Bedard said the plastic barriers are designed to add an extra layer of protection in dual occupancy hotels and the CNE respite. While people will be asked to wear masks inside facilities, there will be long periods when they’d be unmasked while sleeping or resting.

As of Monday afternoon, the city was reporting two shelters with active COVID-19 cases — one case at Strachan House and six at the Kennedy House Youth Shelter. Bédard acknowledged that with cases on the rise in Toronto they may see more throughout the winter.

“When there is broad community spread, we are likely to see it in all areas of our community, and that includes our homeless population,” she said.

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:

Midland COVID-19 assessment centre offering online appointment booking

As of Nov. 17, north Simcoe residents can book appointments for COVID-19 tests online.

The Midland COVID-19 assessment centre, located in the Georgian Bay General Hospital parking lot, has launched a new appointment booking service through its website .

Appointments can also be booked over the phone by calling , between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., seven days a week.

The Midland COVID-19 assessment centre has swabbed and tested nearly 11,000 people since opening on March 25, 2020. The centre is staffed by medical professionals from GBGH, the Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care, Chigamik Community Health Services and the North Simcoe Family Health Team.

In mid-September, the in the number of people seeking COVID-19 tests. The centre conducted 364 tests the week of Sept. 14 to Sept. 18, and 1,305 tests the week of Sept. 21 to Sept. 25. The increased demand for testing has continued.

Staff are urging that , as the centre doesn’t have the capacity to test everyone.

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:

Kristin Rushowy is a Toronto-based reporter covering Ontario politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: