Month: July 2021

Ontario reports two more schools closed because of COVID-19; 56 more school-related cases with 32 among students

Two more schools in Ontario are currently closed because of a outbreak bringing the total to four, according to the Ministry of Health’s latest update Friday morning.

Both additional schools are in Ottawa: St. Jerome Catholic elementary school had two staff members test positive; and Franco-Cité Catholic high school where 15 individuals have tested positive since the school year began.

They join Ottawa’s Horizon-Jeunesse and St. Charles Catholic School near Dufferin Street and Lawrence Avenue West in North York in being closed.

The number of new COVID-19 cases in public schools across Ontario has jumped by 56, to a total of 628 in the last two weeks.

In its , the province reported 32 more students were infected for a total of 369 in the last two weeks; since school began there have been a total of 482.

The data shows there are nine more staff members for a total of 94 in the last two weeks — and an overall total of 149.

The latest report also shows 15 more individuals who weren’t identified for a total of 165 in that category — and an overall total of 245.

There are 429 schools with a reported case, which the province notes is about 8.9 per cent of the 4,828 public schools in Ontario.

The Toronto District School Board updates its information on current COVID-19 cases throughout the day . As of 10 p.m. Thursday, there were 110 TDSB schools with at least one active case — 124 students and 39 staff.

The Toronto Catholic District School Board also updates its information . As of 8:05 a.m. Friday, there were 37 schools with a COVID-19 case, with 41 students and 10 staff infected.

Epidemiologists that the rising numbers in the schools aren’t a surprise, and that the cases will be proportionate to the amount of COVID that is in the community. Ontario set another one-day record Friday, reporting 939 new COVID-19 cases — 336 new cases in Toronto, 150 in Peel and 126 in Ottawa.

Dr. Susy Hota, an epidemiologist with the University Health Network, told the Star earlier that the school numbers are rising because it reflects an exponential increase in the community.

“These are kids who are attending school,” she said this week. “It’s not necessarily that these numbers are (from) school.”

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

COVID-19 had a devastating effect on the quality of life of nursing home residents. We may never know how much because some homes hit pause on assessing it

In the middle of the spring long-term care lockdown, 87-year-old Devora Greenspon likened loneliness to a pain in her heart.

Now, with among 216 residents in 86 Ontario nursing homes, Greenspon is girding for the isolation of a second wave.

“Being alone in one room every day almost made me crazy,” she said in a written statement to the government-created Long-Term Care COVID-19 Commission.

Greenspon speaks for many residents who survived the nursing home lockdown or, after months alone, lost the ability to walk, eat or even coherently speak.

The wellbeing of those residents is supposed to be captured by care-plan assessments documented by staff and sent to the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), an independent not-for-profit funded by federal and provincial governments along with universities and research institutes.

Using these assessments, CIHI publishes quarterly “health indicator” data that show, among other things, a rise or fall in the incidence of worsened mood or depression, the ability to manage daily activities like dressing, bladder control, weight loss and pain.

It’s unlikely that the depth of Greenspon’s emotional devastation is included in the CIHI indicators.

That’s because early last spring, as the virus hit residents and staff, the province passed an emergency measures act that let homes opt out of those assessments, “unless they involve changes of a significant nature.”

Greenspon’s home, Extendicare Bayview, “paused” assessments so staff could better focus on “providing resident care, combatting the outbreaks and removing the virus from the homes,” Extendicare Canada said. As of July 17, all Ontario homes have resumed reporting.

— will ever be known.

University of Waterloo professor John Hirdes, a gerontology expert, told the long-term care commission tasked with examining Ontario’s COVID response that allowing homes to cease assessments means “they turned the lights off…and that was probably a mistake.”

Collection of the data helps individual homes track resident needs, pinpointing problems that need quick action.

The health indicator database for Ontario’s 626 homes also helps researchers understand the different ways the lockdown affected residents — and how some homes did better than others — to protect against isolation in future outbreaks.

At homes with severe outbreaks, where administrators were more likely to stop the health assessments, the information gap means staff did not have this key tracker of resident decline during the most recent CIHI reporting period of April, May and June — the height of the first wave.

In homes that continued the assessments, the data can offer lessons and, if the government calls for another lockdown that bans families or friends, a call for a different approach.

At the City of Toronto’s Seven Oaks home, which had a serious outbreak, health indicators show residents suffered in bladder control and the “activities of daily life” as COVID surged.

While the outbreak at the Region of Peel’s Sheridan Villa was not as severe as some, its data showed a small increase in depression.

Peel manager Mary Connell watched residents’ emotional slide, an observation later validated by her home’s assessment data. “I dread the thought they will try a lockdown again.”

New government-imposed restrictions have begun.

Homes in Toronto and Peel are now allowed to limit residents’ outside excursions with family or friends.

There’s a growing fear that another ban on visitors would force families to spend winter visits standing in the cold, watching through windows as loved ones spiral once again.

Hirdes, the gerontology expert, worries about the impact of the second surge on residents already enfeebled by the first one.

“The typical frailty trajectory we see toward death is one where people start off at one level and something bad happens to them and their function goes way down and when they come back up, they come to a level where their function is not quite as great as before and then they go along and they take another hit, and then they go down and come back and they’re not quite as good as they were before and eventually, they don’t have the capacity to deal with something.”

CIHI hasn’t determined how many homes stopped assessing the health of residents in April, May and June, though Hirdes said he believes most homes completed the assessments.

The Star obtained a worth of quarterly health indicator data for Ontario homes. When collected properly, the health indicators are assessed by a nurse who meets with each resident and speaks with personal support workers and families, although as Hirdes points out relatives were not in homes last spring.

The Star is using the data as an anecdotal snapshot of the first lockdown, when people like Greenspon sat in rooms and withered.

Peel Region’s Connell said Sheridan Villa used the worsening depression data to focus on individual residents who needed help.

One woman, a fashionista, lost her spark and spent her days staring out the window, unspeaking. Staff put a clothing mannequin next to the window and the woman began helping Connell choose new outfits for the mannequin, creating a new ensemble every week. Workers sat with her and read Vogue magazine.

“We know she likes the company of men and we don’t have a lot of men in the home so we bring men in from other departments and they have tea with her,” Connell said, adding that her mood has since improved.

Without indicators from some of the worst hit homes, Hirdes said the extent to which the pandemic may have worsened some residents’ frailty is unknown.

“Without those data, we don’t know how much worse off or how much more frail (residents) have become as a result of COVID. That increased frailty makes them more vulnerable to wave two.”

The Star sent CIHI examples of homes hit with serious outbreaks but whose generated by internal assessments showed a minor impact, or in some cases, slight improvements.

Those numbers seemed counterintuitive, given the loss of staff to care for residents or the fact that during these months the military or hospitals were called in to handle what they would later call dire conditions.

CIHI explained that while the year’s worth of data includes assessments over four quarters, homes that did not complete assessments during the pandemic surge show indicators based on only the prior three quarters.

At Hawthorne Place in North York, 51 residents died and the workforce was decimated due to infections, departures over family health concerns or the government directive that required staff to work in one home only.

Hawthorne Place was one of five homes given help from the Canadian Armed Forces’ Joint Task Force and later, was among 11 temporarily managed by hospitals.

On May 20, a Brigadier General detailed the conditions inside those five homes.

His report said residents at Hawthorne Place cried for up to two hours before staff came to help; some choked while being force-fed; others were moved in and out of bed forcefully.

When the health indicators for Hawthorne Place were released, they showed improvements in almost every indicator, including mood/depression, weight loss and pain.

Those were incomplete. Responsive Group, which manages Hawthorne Place for Rykka Care Centres, told the Star it followed the government’s emergency regulations and did not complete these assessments of residents during the outbreak.

“…Notwithstanding a global pandemic, we expect our indicators to improve every year,” the spokesperson said.

Responsive Group said the military’s report on Hawthorne Place triggered a 21-day inspection by the Ministry of Long-Term Care, adding that inspectors “could not corroborate several of the (military’s) findings.”

“These are just some of the examples where allegations by the CAF were not borne out and they painted Hawthorne Place as a home with pervasive issues as opposed to a home in crisis during a global pandemic that required staffing assistance for its residents. The report issued by the CAF is not a reflection of the quality of care Hawthorne Place aspires to or is known for,” the spokesperson said.

Responsive Group said it “took each of the allegations very seriously.”

“Anything less than an engaging and caring home for our residents is unacceptable and does not meet the high standards we set for ourselves each day.”

A CIHI spokesperson confirmed that it “received less assessments in 2020 Q1 as compared to previous quarters.”

The drop in assessments could be due to a staff focus on the pandemic instead of quarterly assessments or a “reduction in the number of residents,” CIHI said.

More than 1,800 long-term care residents died from COVID in the pandemic’s first wave, and many homes did not admit new residents during the outbreak.

Like Hirdes, Dr. Samir Sinha, Sinai Health System’s director of geriatrics, said CIHI’s long-term data is considered high quality.

Sinha said the indicators “tell you how this resident is doing and how can we better plan their care. But if you don’t actually do that assessment, you are almost flying blind.”

At city-run homes, Paul Raftis, general manager of Seniors Services and Long-Term care, said he and his team reviewed the health indicators to help protect residents from a second wave.

During the outbreak, residents’ daily activities declined as rehabilitation, physiotherapy and occupational therapy programs were suspended. They ate meals alone in their rooms and “behavioural symptoms” in both homes worsened, said Raftis.

To prepare for the second wave, Raftis said staff spoke to residents to find ways to handle the depression and loneliness.

This time, he said, homes will continue visits from two essential caregivers, using strict infection-control procedures, “even if the home experiences an outbreak.”

Some socializing will take place with cohorted groups, he said. Staff are being taught to connect with residents, he said — make eye contact, chat, comfort, or play music that connects to each person.

Residents in isolation will eat meals while sitting in the doorway of their room — eating together yet still physically distanced, he said.

Others will eat in the dining room, at tables set apart, so they can still have a conversation.

“We recognize that COVID-19 has had a significant impact on the quality of life for residents, their families, and staff members,” Raftis said.

Data analysis by Andrew Bailey

Moira Welsh is a Toronto-based investigative reporter for the Star. Reach her at . Follow her on Twitter: @moirawelsh

‘Remember and commemorate’: Remembrance Day on your own in Barrie

The poppy campaign chairperson Fern Taillefer already has a Remembrance Day guest list.

This year’s ceremony will be a small, private affair, but Taillefer encourages people to mark the day in their own way.

“The actual venue for the parade will be the Legion, upstairs,” Taillefer said. He isn’t inviting Second World War veterans, for safety reasons.

“The silver cross mother, (Beth) McKay and (Fred) McKay will be there.”

It has been a decade since their 24-year-old son Kevin was .

They will lay a wreath during the service, which will be televised on Rogers TV.

And a few wreaths will be left at the Barrie Cenotaph for the public.

“They will be there for two days, so people can remember and commemorate, and leave a poppy if they want.”

Poppies will be on sale later this month, but boxes will be on a table, with sanitized tongs for people to pick their own.

Poppy face masks are also on sale for $10 each at the Legion.

Taillefer knows the poppy revenue will be down from the $120,000 raised last year, but he’s hoping to reach $100,000.

Flu shot in stock? These search engines will tell you

Cold and flu season is here, and Ontarians are encouraged to get the flu vaccine as the province climbs higher into its second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Because the symptoms of COVID-19 and the flu are so similar, preventing a flu infection could help save health-care resources for patients with COVID-19. 

Getting the vaccine may be trickier right now than in previous years, as the rush of people looking to get the shot this month has left some pharmacies out of stock and led to long lines and wait times at others. 

Fortunately, several pharmacy and clinic chains throughout the province maintain searchable databases of locations that offer the flu vaccine and have it in stock.

Browse our list below to find a pharmacy or clinic with the vaccine near you.

Shopper’s Drug Mart

The indicates which locations offer the vaccine and have it in stock. Just enter your city or postal code into the search field to see which stores near you have the vaccine on hand.

Filling out the online screening and consent form in advance will save you time at the counter.

Loblaw

shows which pharmacies located within Loblaws and No Frills grocery stores offer the flu vaccine and have it in stock.

Guardian and IDA

reveals which Guardian and IDA pharmacy locations offer the flu vaccine, but not whether they have it in stock. To find out if a store has the vaccine in stock, contact that store before going in.

Rexall

Rexall offers for flu vaccines, but does not allow users to search specifically for locations with the vaccine in stock. To book an appointment, select your preferred location and answer a few COVID-19 screening questions. If there are no appointments available at your preferred time, check other locations or try again later.

Appletree Medical Group

A search of Appletree’s will show nearby clinic locations and indicate whether each location has the flu vaccine avaiable. No appointment is necessary.

My Flu Shot

This shows flu shot inventories in pharmacies and health centres across Canada. Users can either search through pharmacy locations on a map or sign up to receive an email notification when their chosen pharmacy locations have the shot in stock.

Contact your to learn about upcoming flu vaccine clinics

Midland businesses benefitting from shop local campaigns

Businesses in downtown Midland are being kept afloat thanks to a community effort to encourage more residents to shop local this holiday season.

“We are seeing a lot of people that we’ve never seen before,” said Sarah Kenney, co-owner of Georgian Bay Books at 247 King St. “People are really making an effort to shop local.”

Sales at Georgian Bay Books have been steady since September and are now on par with last year. This comes as a welcome surprise for Kenney and co-owner Sandy Dunsford, who struggled through the spring and summer.

“It was a rough summer,” said Kenney. “But sales have been back up to normal from September through to December. Which is great. Christmas is always a busy time for book stores.”

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and King Street reconstruction project dramatically affected sales for many businesses. 

and other businesses in downtown Midland, are relying on this holiday season more than ever before. Because of this, a variety of local organizations are encouraging residents to shop local in hopes of keeping more money in the community.

The has spent the last eight months pushing the shop local message.

“Small business owners pay taxes, they employ local people, and they most likely try and support local as well,” said Cathy Tait, executive director of the chamber. “Local business owners are also the ones giving back to non-for-profit organizations and sports clubs. So, when you support these businesses, you are supporting our community.”

For every $100 spent at a small business, roughly $68 stays in the community, according to Tait. For every $100 spent at a local franchise operation, $48.95 stays in the community.

“These operations are run by real people. They are our neighbours, our friends or our family. They really do have a vested interest in the business,” said Tait. “They keep our communities authentic and interesting by offering products and services that wouldn’t normally be available in big-box stores.”

One of these unique small businesses is , which carries Canadian-made clothing. Owner Nancy Spiker regularly gives back to the community, helping non-profit organizations.

This holiday season, Spiker is inviting a number of different local artists to her store and giving them space to sell their work. 

“There is definitely some cross-promotion. I think it works well for both parties,” said Spiker. “It gives the artist a very accessible public space to show their work.”

Sales at A Passion for Fashion have improved over the last few months. According to Spiker, sales in November were on par with last year. She credits that to a noticeable effort people are making to shop local.

“It’s important to shop local,” said Spiker. “Then money circulates within our community. If we continue helping out one another, we all have a great chance of thriving and surviving this pandemic.”

STORY BEHIND THE STORY: Reporter Andrew Mendler decided to talk to businesses in downtown Midland about the importance of shopping local.

Canada’s COVID-19 vaccines have to travel through the United States. Will Donald Trump take them?

OTTAWA—The first shipment of a newly-approved COVID-19 vaccine destined for Canada departs Friday on a journey now more perilous because of President Donald Trump’s executive order declaring vaccines should go to Americans first.

That’s because the first 30,000 doses from Pfizer/BioNTech will be loaded on a UPS plane at Puurs, Belgium, which then flies through Cologne, Germany, and onto Louisville, Kentucky, before being divvied up on planes travelling on to Canada.

“If all goes well,” said Canada’s co-ordinator of the massive operation, Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin, the customized thermal shippers containing the precious cargo will arrive at 14 different sites across Canada Monday. And an unprecedented national vaccination campaign would begin with injections in Canadian arms starting Tuesday.

However, Fortin acknowledged there is a risk, although slight, to the Canadian vaccine shipment because of Trump’s order. “We’re looking at all the risks associated with transport,” he told the Star after a briefing.

A senior government official said the Trudeau government’s analysis is that the risk is low because Trump’s order does not mention the Defence Production Act — the law Trump invoked to try to block earlier shipments of 3M N95 masks to Canada. But it’s not zero, the official acknowledged.

Christina Antoniou, Pfizer Canada’s corporate relations director, in a written reply to the Star said, the vaccine “transits through the UPS hub in Louisville, Kentucky, in an international transit zone. It then gets redeployed to Canadian airports.”

“We are still assessing the implications of the executive order to determine its potential impact,” she wrote. “What we can reiterate at this time is that we are making vaccine doses available as quickly as possible based on the terms of current agreements with individual countries. We are committed to honouring our agreement with the Canadian government.”

International trade lawyer Lawrence Herman thinks the risk is low too, noting many analysts in the U.S. feel the president doesn’t have any legal basis for his order.

“That being said, you never know with Mr. Trump and his legal team. But I would think that Canada has every reason to believe that the legal arrangements we made with the supplier will be honoured.”

Anita Anand, the federal procurement minister who landed the deal for 20 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, and secured early delivery last weekend, said she was “confident” based on assurances from Pfizer that “the company with whom we have contracted will ensure that those deliveries make it to our shores.”

It was a cautionary note on the day that Health Canada regulators granted a first formal authorization to Pfizer/BioNTech to distribute a novel mRNA vaccine, making Canada the third country to approve it, after the U.K, and Bahrain — news that brought an air of giddiness to Parliament Hill.

“This is a big deal and a good news day for Canadians,” said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, “but we are not through this yet. We have a tough winter to get through and I know we are going to be able to get through it together.”

Federal Health Minister Patty Hajdu said she breathed “a sigh of relief.”

For weeks she had no communication with regulators, just signals that they were close to a decision this week.

The company is expected to ship up to 4 million of Canada’s prepurchased 20 million doses by the end of March.

Anand said the Trudeau government is now looking at exercising its option to purchase up to an additional 56 million vaccine doses, especially if it can get assurances of early delivery dates for those options. “It makes sense,” she said.

Health Canada says all Canadians get access to a vaccine by the end of September 2021, but Hajdu said only that her goal is to see the campaign reach all Canadians by the end of the year. Government sources, however, acknowledge the public uncertainty around a new vaccine could mean only around 70 per cent of Canadians will get vaccinated.

Dr. Supriya Sharma, the chief medical adviser to the regulatory team, said, “Canadians can have confidence in our rigorous review process and that the vaccine was authorized only after a thorough assessment of the evidence demonstrated that it met Health Canada strict standards for safety, efficacy and quality.”

Sharma smiled when asked how Canada beat the U.S. to regulatory authorization, joking, “We’re just better.”

Turning serious, she said it wasn’t a race, but explained Canada got all the data it needed late Tuesday night, and issued an authorization that is broader than the emergency use authorization that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is looking at. The U.S. could issue its decision Thursday.

“The geek in me is amazed,” said Sharma. “No one would have thought even when we looked back at the first discovery of the virus that less than a year later we’d be authorizing and then distributing a vaccine.”

“At last we have a reason to feel optimistic … about to returning to the lives we led pre-COVID,” said Dr. Howard Njoo, Canada’s deputy chief public health officer. “This has been a marathon, but now we are nearing the finish line.”

Health Canada says the vaccine is safe and effective for broad use in those aged 16 and over because the benefits clearly outweighed the risks. Sharma said regulators are still examining reports of two British health care workers who have had allergic reactions.

Clinical trials of the vaccine turned up just two allergic reactions out of nearly 44,000 people who were part of the trials — one received the vaccine, one received a placebo.

For now, only those with an allergy specifically to listed ingredients of the vaccine should not receive an inoculation, she said. The federal government has not yet advised people with a history of strong allergic reactions against getting vaccinated.

Sharma said Ottawa will make clear its recommendation on that before immunization begins next week.

Several terms and conditions including monitoring and reporting requirements have been put on Pfizer/BioNTech, to track expected side effects, like headaches, fatigue and sore arms, along with rare adverse effects.

At Queen’s Park, Premier Doug Ford called it “phenomenal news.”

“As soon as vaccines arrive on Ontario soil, we will be ready to deliver and administer them,” Ford said in a written statement. “Friends, the light at the end of the tunnel grows brighter.”

The decision about who gets the vaccines first is up to provinces, which have responsibility for delivering health care.

Quebec has said it will start with long-term-care residents and workers, Manitoba said it will begin vaccinating health workers on the front lines of the COVID-19 response.

Ontario has not revealed which hospitals will receive, thaw and mix the vaccines but has said 21 hospitals are equipped with ultracold freezers to handle the vials from Pfizer, but is expecting about 40 per cent of the vaccines shipped to Canada.

With files from Rob Ferguson

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

Ontario’s COVID-19 testing system in upheaval as volumes drop at some sites, positivity rates rise and samples get shipped out of province

The record high number of tests reported Thursday masks upheaval in Ontario’s testing system, with assessment centre volumes dropping, positivity rates rising, and other provinces bailing out Ontario’s backlog.

This week, Ontario Health directed some hospitals in Greater Toronto to reduce testing volumes at assessment centres, according to a memo seen by the Star, part of an effort to reduce the persistent queue of unprocessed tests.

At other hospitals in the GTA, testing “targets” have remained the same, but the number of people getting swabbed is dropping nonetheless — in some cases by nearly half. Doctors say the switch to appointment-based bookings is merely moving lineups online, and shifting the testing backlog to before swabs are collected rather than afterward.

Next week, Ontario’s public health agency will begin sending 1,000 specimens a day to Nova Scotia labs to be tested for COVID-19, and another 500 a day to the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg. New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs said Tuesday he and Ontario Premier Doug Ford have discussed “what we might be able to do to help” with Ontario’s testing needs.

Amid these challenges, the daily reported COVID-19 infections don’t currently provide an accurate picture of the state of Ontario’s epidemic, experts say — a particularly alarming situation as Ontario Thursday, with regional hot spots reporting rapidly rising rates of positive tests.

The numbers being reported by the province right now are “useless,” says Dr. Andrew Morris with the Sinai Health System and University Health Network.

“We’re not flattening the curve. We’re hiding it.”

On Thursday, the number of tests “currently under investigation” in Ontario was 58,000, after the backlog hit 91,000 late last week. Thursday’s record of completed tests was 48,500.

Ontario Health on Tuesday told some hospitals in its Central Region to reduce testing volumes at assessment centres, in part to better align tests with current lab capacity, according to a memo seen by the Star. Hospitals in this region include Mississauga’s Trillium Health Partners, Humber River Regional Hospital and William Osler Health System, which includes Brampton Civic Hospital and Etobicoke General Hospital, both in COVID-19 “hot spots.”

Ontario Health, the agency in charge of COVID-19 testing, did not respond to questions from the Star regarding testing volumes and targets.

At Trillium Health Partners (THP), the number of daily tests conducted at its two assessment centres has recently dropped by more than half.

In September, THP conducted an average of 1,200 tests a day, according to a press release outlining its plan to manage the pandemic’s second wave. On Wednesday, a spokesperson confirmed THP is currently testing 500 people a day at its assessment centres, adding that its “testing volume is aligned with guidance from Ontario Health.”

When pressed on the difference, a spokesperson said the hospital had in recent weeks “adapted its testing model” to include “testing by appointment only and testing symptomatic patients only.

“These updated guidelines have resulted in a change in the number of people being tested daily at THP.”

At William Osler Health system, which operates assessment centres in Brampton and Etobicoke, a spokesperson said average daily testing volumes had dropped from 1,648 daily (Oct. 1-3) to 1,292 (Oct. 4-7).

“Osler has aligned its testing capacity based on Ontario Health’s guidance,” Donna Harris said, adding that the hospitals support local partners doing testing in the community, “including neighbourhoods experiencing greater risk.”

Officials from Humber River Hospital, also located in Ontario Health’s Central Region, said the testing target has not recently changed at its two assessment centres — it remains 350 samples per day, with the ability to scale up to 500, said spokesperson Joe Gorman. But the new appointment-only model enables the hospital to “stay on those targets,” he said.

This week, testing activity has significantly dropped below targets, however, with a daily average of 270 tests compared to 520 last week. Meanwhile, the positivity rate at Humber is 11.5 per cent, Gorman said — an alarming statistic that suggests worrying levels of community spread in the surrounding area, which was the city’s hardest-hit region during the epidemic’s first wave.

In Peel, the rate of people testing positive for the virus is on the rise, according to Ministry of Health data provided to Peel Public Health. The positivity rate for the region was 3.05 per cent for the week of Sept. 20-26, and 3.49 per cent for the week of Sept. 27-Oct. 3. However, a spokesperson said the most recent provincial data representing the week ending Oct. 3 should be interpreted with caution as it is considered incomplete due to “lab lags,” meaning more positive tests may be reported in the coming days for this period.

Physicians who spoke to the Star are concerned online booking is creating yet another barrier for people who need COVID-19 tests, especially those in marginalized communities or elderly people who might struggle to navigate these Internet-based systems.

Dr. Lisa Salamon, chair of the Toronto district of the Ontario Medical Association, believes that the government’s shift to an appointment-only system was aimed at limiting the number of tests performed. “It’s directly capping it,” she said. “This is the government really wanting to reduce lineups, wanting to take away the media ops of long lineup pictures.”

Salamon, an emergency room physician, works at an assessment centre in Toronto and said hospitals that already had an appointment-only model before the province’s policy shift were always seeing fewer people. “We were getting their overflow from the beginning.”

Since her testing site stopped taking walk-ins, volumes have dropped by roughly half, she said.

“It’s now a gong show,” Salamon said. “The hospitals worked all weekend long trying to figure out how to do (online bookings) because the government mandated it, and now people can’t get appointments … it just puts up more and more barriers for people to get the care that they need.”

“People who are symptomatic need free and open access to testing and we don’t have that right now,” said an emergency room physician who works at a hospital assessment centre in the GTA, and who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak for the organization.

“I believe it was the government’s intent to manage access because they don’t want a backlog of tests because that is measured. They can have a backlog of people waiting for a test because no one measures that.”

A new phenomenon that seems to have been ushered in by Ontario’s new system of appointment-only testing is high cancellation rates. In Kitchener, says it’s seeing more than 100 no-shows per day this week; at Mackenzie Health in Richmond Hill, the assessment centre was recently testing up to 1,000 people a day but this week that dropped to a daily average of 700, about 10 per cent of whom end up cancelling.

At Humber River, 83 people cancelled Wednesday and 73 the day before, said Dr. Ruben Rodriguez, lead for the hospital’s assessment centres. “The phenomenon that is occurring with the change to appointment-only is that the public is trying to book at multiple facilities and whenever they find the soonest one, they forget about the other one,” he said. “That is taking away appointments from other people.”

The specimens being sent to Nova Scotia and Winnipeg for testing are part of a partnership struck by Public Health Ontario. The agency couldn’t confirm if other members of the provincial testing network are also sending samples out of province.

A spokesperson said the arrangement to send specimens to Nova Scotia — 1,000 on weekdays, 500 on weekends — and the National Microbiology Lab in Winnipeg — up to 500 a day — was created “to improve test turnaround times and to address the current backlog of tests.” The agency is hoping to get results back within three days.

“We are unsure at this point how long the partnerships will continue,” PHO spokesperson Janet Wong said, adding that the agency is building capacity at its own labs and once that is reached, won’t require out-of-province testing.

“The PHO lab works collaboratively with public health laboratories across the country, and this partnership is an example of that collaboration and support.”

With files from Kevin Jiang

Megan Ogilvie is a Toronto-based health reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Kate Allen is a Toronto-based reporter covering science and technology for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Jennifer Yang is a Toronto-based reporter covering identity and inequality for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Electrical fire causes roughly $50,000 in damage to ex-Huronia Regional Centre building in Orillia

An unoccupied and unused building at the former Huronia Regional Centre (HRC) property caught fire Friday night.

Orillia Fire Department crews were called by security staff to Building 17, located near the middle of the sprawling complex just off Memorial Avenue, Oct. 2. Once on scene, firefighters noticed the large building was full of smoke, Fire Chief Brent Thomas told Simcoe.com Saturday morning.

“On investigation an electrical fire was discovered,” he said. “To ensure the electrical fire was not smouldering in the walls, fire crews had to check in some of the walls for fire extension. We also had to clear smoke from a large building and underground access way.”

Damage is estimated at about $50,000. That number excludes destruction caused by smoke, which will be difficult to assess because renovations on the building are expected to start soon, Thomas said.

“Orillia Fire was able to determine the cause so the (Office of the) Fire Marshal will not be (called in),” he said.

No injuries were reported. At the height of the incident, there were four Orillia trucks on scene, as well as tankers from neighbouring Rama, Ramara and Oro-Medonte departments, Thomas said.

HRC was closed more than a decade ago; the property is presently operated by Infrastructure Ontario and home to a courthouse and OPP training facilities.

Toronto steps up support of hundreds of local food businesses by offering two weeks of free delivery

With indoor dining banned and patio service dwindling as temperatures drop, Toronto is stepping up to help hundreds of restaurants bring in some extra money.

In May, the city announced the where businesses — not limited to food — could sign up for free to use Ritual’s mobile ordering tool for pickup, Ritual ONE. As an extension of the program, participating restaurants can now access delivery service through DoorDash Drive, where businesses are charged a flat rate rather than a percentage for each order.

As a special offer, starting Monday and running until Nov. 8, delivery will be free for the restaurants and customers.

The aim is to encourage customers to order directly from local businesses and for those businesses to increase their commission-free online sales.

A spokesperson for Ritual says both Ritual and DoorDash are covering the fees that are being waived.

The partnership is welcome relief for the struggling food-service industry, as third-party delivery apps charge hefty commission fees of up to 30 per cent per order. In response, some restaurant owners COVID-19 shutdowns took a swing at profits. In the U.S., cities such as New York, Denver, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Seattle and Los Angeles have enforced a 10- to 15- per-cent cap on delivery fees from third-party apps such as Uber Eats during the pandemic.

In B.C., it has also become an election issue as both the NDP and Liberal parties if elected.

Skip the Dishes that it is offering a 25 per cent rebate on commissions for restaurants.

Later this week for the city to call on the province to implement a similar limit on commission fees. Toronto doesn’t have the authority to make these calls.

MPP Amanda Simard (Glengarry-Prescott-Russel) has for the province to cap fees at 15 per cent.

“Our restaurants need our support and they need it now … not photo ops of MPPs ordering takeout or the premier asking delivery companies to please, please, please reduce their fees,” Simard said at Queen’s Park last week.

The full list of participating restaurants is available through .

Karon Liu is a Toronto-based food reporter for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

BEHIND THE CRIMES: Who mailed the bomb that killed Wayne Greavette?

Mere seconds. That’s all the time it took for a bomb to detonate in the hands of Wayne Greavette as he sat in the living room of his home, killing him in the presence of his family.

It came in the form of a flashlight-turned homemade explosive device, mailed under the guise of a present, with a letter tucked inside that ominously signed off with, “Have a Merry Christmas and may you never have to buy another flashlight.”

The horrific moment when the father of two innocently pressed the on switch was over in the blink of an eye. But it changed the Greavette family forever.

Almost a quarter century has passed since that day, Dec. 12, 1996.

But police aren’t giving up hope that the case will ultimately be solved.

A $50,000 reward is still being offered by the provincial government, through the OPP, for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person(s) who took Greavette’s life.

“It is our goal to solve all unsolved crimes,” said Detective Insp. Randy Gaynor of the OPP criminal investigation branch. “We follow up on all information that becomes available.”

It was a chilly Thursday in December when the package arrived at the farm the Greavettes had recently purchased on Concession 11, between 15 and 17 sideroads, in the rural Milton area.

The land held much promise for Wayne and Diane, who had hoped to harness the artesian well on the property to launch a spring water bottling business.

His son Justin, who was 21 at the time, went out to get the mail that day, bringing in a package for his father delivered by Canada Post that appeared to be a present in white wrapping paper. Inside the box — an emptied cardboard wine container with the UPC cut off — was a Duracell flashlight and a letter written on a typewriter with a unique key flaw that inserted a back slash after each period.

As Wayne read the letter that detailed a business proposal from what turned out to be a phoney company, Justin tried to turn the flashlight on, but nothing happened.

When his 42-year-old father pushed the button, the bomb went off — a device filled with an emulsion-type explosive and nails that acted as shrapnel, according to the OPP.

Wayne was killed instantly in front of his son, brother and wife, Diane. Daughter Danielle wasn’t home at the time.

While decades have passed since that fateful day, the family has maintained the same mantra throughout the years — “somebody knows something.”

But who?

Gaynor couldn’t comment on possible motives or persons of interest in the case as it’s considered potential evidence, but the family did some investigative work of their own alongside CBC documentarian David Ridgen for his 2009 piece, “The Bomb That Killed Wayne Greavette.”

In the documentary, they considered many possible options: that perhaps someone was jealous of his impending spring water business, or it was a person he knew through the beverage and packaging industry, or a woman Wayne may have had a relationship with.

The packaging that came with the flashlight contained some local connections. Flyers were used to cushion the device, with at least one being sourced locally as it was for a Milton store — Copeland Lumber, which later became Rona on Main Street near Wilson Drive.

Wayne had worked in Milton for many years, leading his family to believe at the time that someone from that area may have information that could help solve the case.

Then there’s the potential ties to Halton Hills. A month before the murder, two men are said to have visited the Acton post office asking for Wayne’s current address.

The package was labelled with an Acton return address that doesn’t exist.

Gaynor couldn’t say if the documentary, Ridgen’s later podcasts or the $50,000 reward have resulted in fresh tips for the police, citing confidentiality of the investigation.

But one thing is for certain — the case will remain on the OPP’s radar for as long as it takes.

“We never close a case,” said Gaynor. “Information that someone has about the murder may be the piece we need to put it all together.”