Month: September 2021

‘An existential threat’: Collingwood throws support behind conservation authority

Collingwood has joined a growing chorus of municipalities calling on the Ontario government to consult the public on changes to legislation affecting conservation authorities.

Updates to the Conservation Authorities Act and Planning Act have been buried within the government’s budget bill, released in early November, and critics have said the changes will limit the ability of conservation authorities to assess the environmental impact of developments.

In a news release issued earlier in November by the Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority, which includes Collingwood among its 18-member municipalities, the NVCA raises the concern that the minister of natural resources and forestry can issue an order to take over and decide a development permit application in place of a conservation authority.

The proposed changes also remove the potential ability of a conservation authority to issue a stop work order on someone who may be doing harm to an environmentally-protected area.

Coun. Mariane McLeod, who is also vice-chair of the NVCA, said the changes have been hidden in a bill that is being expedited in the Ontario legislature.

“Such wide-ranging changes to an entity that we in Collingwood fund to the tune of $270,000 a year should get some input from us,” she said, adding the changes are “seen as an existential threat to conservation authorities.”

Similar motions of support for conservation authorities have already been passed by a number of municipalities, including Essa Township, and several municipalities in Halton Region, she said.

Locally, Clearview Township declined to pass a similar motion at its Nov. 23 meeting. At its Nov. 25 meeting, Wasaga Beach council referred the matter to planning staff for a recommendation.

Collingwood’s chief administrative officer Sonya Skinner, who was previously the CAO for the Grey-Sauble Conservation Authority, said that at a minimum, the provincial government should provide opportunities for municipalities to comment on the changes.

One of the changes proposed include directing conservation authority board members to act only on the behalf of the municipality they represent, rather than the watershed. Skinner noted there is value in a shared approach to managing and monitoring water in a watershed.

“You can’t work on the hydraulics of a river when that river is just passing through Collingwood or just passing through Clearview — you need to look at the whole thing. We can’t really do that on our own,” she said. In an era of development and climate change, “it’s going to weaken our ability to address these types of issues if we don’t have a board that’s truly looking at the full watershed.”

Skinner said that while the development industry might have legitimate concerns about conservation authorities, be they fees or the time it takes to process an application, “these are items that need to be worked on in that specific area of concern, and not by weakening a water-related authority.

“If conservation authorities don’t do that work, we may end up accountable for it at the municipal level — and I don’t see that as in the best interest of Collingwood,” she said.

Today’s coronavirus news: Eighteen students, one staff test positive for COVID-19 at Toronto elementary school; Southern Ontario officials charge businesses, anti-maskers over gathering rules

The latest news from Canada and around the world Sunday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.

10:56 p.m.: Eighteen students and a staff member have tested positive for COVID-19 at an east-end Toronto elementary school.

A spokesman for the Toronto District School Board says the staff and students at Thorncliffe Park Public School were tested for the virus as part of a new pilot project.

Ryan Bird says 14 classes have been asked to self-isolate, but the school will remain open.

In a letter to parents sent Sunday night, the school principal says that’s because four per cent of the school tested positive, compared to a 16 per cent positivity rate in the broader Thorncliffe Park community.

He says he understands the cases are worrisome, but notes the school is actively monitoring the situation and communicating with Toronto Public Health.

7:35 p.m.: Officials in southern Ontario fined businesses, charged anti-maskers and busted at least one massive party over the weekend as the province recorded another 1,708 cases of COVID-19 on Sunday.

The enforcement in York, Hamilton and Peel came after a week that saw record-setting viral case counts and the introduction of more stringent public health measures in some regions.

In Mississauga, Ont., a part of Peel Region which is currently under lockdown, police said authorities had broken up a party with 60 attendees at a short-term rental unit.

“It’s a tough time for everyone,” Deputy Chief Marc Andrews of the Peel Regional Police tweeted. “These antics help no one.”

He said bylaw officers issued 27 fines of $880, and three Part 3 summons to the hosts, who he said could face at least $10,000 in fines if convicted.

In York Region, officials continued an enforcement blitz at businesses to make sure they were following public health protocols for the province’s “red” zones.

The rules limit indoor dining to 10 customers at a time with physical distancing in place. Gyms, meanwhile, can only have 10 patrons inside at once, while 25 people can attend outdoor classes.

Officers inspected 256 businesses on Sunday and issued charges at 16, a news release said.

An L.A. Fitness location in East Gwillimbury, Ont., and the Trio Sportsplex in Vaughan, Ont., are among those facing charges.

Authorities have inspected 867 businesses since Friday, laid 32 charges and completed 1,151 “compliance education activities,” the release said.

Farther west, Hamilton Police announced they had charged three men — aged 26, 48 and 72 — at a “Hugs over Masks” protest in the city’s downtown area on Sunday.

Police said 35 people attended the event, exceeding the maximum number of people allowed at outdoor gatherings.

“Prior to the event, Hamilton Police identified the organizer and informed him that the planned gathering would breach offences under the Reopening Ontario Act and leave him open to charges, police said in a written statement. “The organizer went ahead with the event.”

All three men — one of whom police said was the organizer — were charged under the Act, and would face a fine of at least $10,000 if convicted.

3:30 p.m.: Saskatchewan is reporting 351 new COVID-19 cases, but no new deaths today. The number of people who have died from COVID-19 in the province stands at 45. Saskatchewan’s daily COVID-19 updates have noted this weekend that community transmission can happen quickly. The updates state that 17 nurses in one hospital were recently required to self-isolate after being identified as close contacts to positive cases linked to sporting events and general community transmission.

2:30 p.m.: Nunavut health officials are reporting 13 new cases in the territory. The number of local active cases, however, declined today due to 32 people who have recovered.

That figure now stands at 112. The territory reports that everyone with active COVID-19 is doing well, with mild to moderate symptoms.

2:30 p.m.: The latest numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Canada as of 2:16 p.m. EST on Nov. 29, 2020:

There are 368,279 confirmed cases in Canada.

  • Quebec: 141,038 confirmed (including 7,033 deaths, 122,014 resolved)
  • Ontario: 114,746 confirmed (including 3,648 deaths, 97,319 resolved)
  • Alberta: 54,836 confirmed (including 524 deaths, 39,381 resolved)
  • British Columbia: 30,884 confirmed (including 395 deaths, 21,304 resolved)
  • Manitoba: 16,483 confirmed (including 301 deaths, 7,010 resolved)
  • Saskatchewan: 8,239 confirmed (including 45 deaths, 4,589 resolved)
  • Nova Scotia: 1,271 confirmed (including 65 deaths, 1,078 resolved)
  • New Brunswick: 481 confirmed (including 7 deaths, 363 resolved)
  • Newfoundland and Labrador: 333 confirmed (including 4 deaths, 297 resolved)
  • Nunavut: 177 confirmed (including 65 resolved)
  • Prince Edward Island: 72 confirmed (including 68 resolved)
  • Yukon: 42 confirmed (including 1 death, 29 resolved)
  • Northwest Territories: 15 confirmed (including 15 resolved)
  • Repatriated Canadians: 13 confirmed (including 13 resolved)
  • Total: 368,279 (0 presumptive, 368,279 confirmed including 12,023 deaths, 293,477 resolved)

2:00 p.m.: The number of COVID-19 cases continues to creep up across most of Atlantic Canada.

New Brunswick is reporting 14 new cases of the novel coronavirus today, the highest in eastern Canada.

Elsewhere Nova Scotia says it’s identified 10 new diagnoses, nine of which are in the province’s central zone, while Newfoundland and Labrador is reporting four new cases.

Health officials in Prince Edward Island held a rare weekend news conference today, but say there are no new cases in the province.

1:35 p.m.: New York City will reopen its school system to in-person learning, and increase the number of days a week many children attend class, even as the coronavirus pandemic intensifies in the city, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Sunday.

The announcement marks a major policy reversal for the nation’s largest school system, less than two weeks after de Blasio, a Democrat, announced that schools were shutting down because of a rising number of COVID-19 cases in the city.

New York City’s public schools opened to in-person learning starting in September for students whose parents had chosen bricks-and-mortar schooling. School buildings closed again Nov. 19 amid rising COVID-19 infections in the city.

The mayor said the city was doing away with its previous trigger for closing schools, which was when 3 per cent or more of the virus tests conducted in the city over a seven-day period came back positive.

Since then, de Blasio suggested, relatively low numbers of positive coronavirus tests at schools show that it’s possible to keep schools open even with a citywide test positivity rate over 3 per cent.

New York City exceeded the 3 per cent threshold early in November, and things have slightly worsened since then. More than 9,300 New York City residents have tested positive for the virus over the past seven days.

12:40 p.m.: The chairman of American vaccine maker Moderna says Canada is near the front of the line to receive 20 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine it pre-ordered.

Noubar Afeyan offered that assessment today in an interview with CBC’s Rosemary Barton Live. Afeyan’s remarks come as the Trudeau government has come under fire this past week for its ability to deliver a timely vaccine to Canadians.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau created a firestorm when he said Canadians will have to wait a bit to get vaccinated for COVID-19 because the first doses off the production lines will be used in the countries where they are made.

Afeyan was asked whether the fact that Canada committed to pre-purchase its doses before other jurisdictions means it will get its supply first. Afeyan confirmed that was the case.

“The people who are willing to move early on with even less proof of the efficacy have assured the amount of supply they were willing to sign up to,” he said.

“In the case of Canada, that number is about 20 million doses. But the Canadian government, like others, have also reserved the ability to increase that amount. And those discussions are ongoing,” he added.

11:35 a.m.: Dr. Anthony Fauci, America’s top infectious disease expert, said Sunday that the U.S. may see “surge upon a surge” of the coronavirus over the coming weeks, and he does not expect current recommendations around social distancing to be relaxed before Christmas.

“When you have the kind of inflection that we have, it doesn’t all of a sudden turn around like that,” Dr. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told ABC’s “This Week.” “So clearly in the next few weeks, we’re going to have the same sort of thing. And perhaps even two or three weeks down the line … we may see a surge upon a surge.”

Fauci also appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” where he made similar remarks, adding that it’s “not too late” for people travelling back home after Thanksgiving to help stop the spread of the virus by wearing masks, staying distant from others and avoiding large groups of people.

“So we know we can do something about it, particularly now as we get into the colder season and as we approach the Christmas holidays,” he said.

The number of new COVID-19 cases reported in the United States topped 200,000 for the first time Friday. The highest previous daily count was 196,000 on Nov. 20, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

11:20 a.m.: The latest numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Canada as of 11:11 a.m. EST on Nov. 29, 2020:

There are 366,193 confirmed cases in Canada.

  • Quebec: 141,038 confirmed (including 7,033 deaths, 122,014 resolved)
  • Ontario: 114,746 confirmed (including 3,648 deaths, 97,319 resolved)
  • Alberta: 54,836 confirmed (including 524 deaths, 39,381 resolved)
  • British Columbia: 30,884 confirmed (including 395 deaths, 21,304 resolved)
  • Manitoba: 16,118 confirmed (including 290 deaths, 6,804 resolved)
  • Saskatchewan: 7,888 confirmed (including 45 deaths, 4,521 resolved)
  • Nova Scotia: 1,271 confirmed (including 65 deaths, 1,078 resolved)
  • New Brunswick: 481 confirmed (including 7 deaths, 363 resolved)
  • Newfoundland and Labrador: 333 confirmed (including 4 deaths, 297 resolved)
  • Nunavut: 164 confirmed (including 33 resolved)
  • Prince Edward Island: 72 confirmed (including 68 resolved)
  • Yukon: 42 confirmed (including 1 death, 29 resolved)
  • Northwest Territories: 15 confirmed (including 15 resolved)
  • Repatriated Canadians: 13 confirmed (including 13 resolved)
  • Total: 366,193 (0 presumptive, 366,193 confirmed including 11,988 deaths, 291,796 resolved)

11:15 a.m.: Quebec is reporting 1,395 new cases of COVID-19 and 12 additional deaths linked to the virus. Health officials say four of those deaths occurred in the past 24 hours and eight others took place between Nov. 22 and 27. Hospitalizations went down by 13 today for a total of 665, including 92 people in intensive care — a decrease of one compared to the previous day. Quebec has now reported 141,038 total cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic began and 7,033 deaths.

11:10 a.m.: Ontario is reporting 1,708 new cases of COVID-19 and 24 new deaths related to the novel coronavirus.

Health minister Christine Elliott says 503 of those cases are in Peel Region and 463 in Toronto — the only two regions currently under lockdown. She says another 185 are in York Region, which is at the red alert level, the next most stringent under the province’s tiered system.

The province says nearly 54,000 tests were completed since the last daily update, and 1,443 cases are newly considered resolved.

The numbers come a day before more stringent COVID-19 measures are set to take effect in five Ontario regions.

Windsor-Essex will be moved to the red level, Haldimand-Norfolk to orange, and three others — Hastings Prince Edward, Lambton and Northwestern — to the yellow.

Provincial data released last week suggested case counts were flattening somewhat, but Ontario recorded its highest number of daily infections the next day, at 1,855.

Officials have said it could take up to two weeks after new restrictions are imposed to see any improvements.

11:04 a.m.: The Czech government said Sunday it is easing measures imposed to contain the new coronavirus due to falling numbers of new confirmed cases.

Health Minister Jan Blatny said all stores, restaurants and bars can reopen on Thursday and a ban on Sunday sales is lifted. Restaurants can be open 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., though they are limited to 50 per cent of their capacity. Stores and shopping centres also must limit the number of customers. Hair salons, fitness centres and gyms are allowed to reopen, as are zoos, museums and galleries.

The Czech Republic was among the hardest hit by a new wave of infections in the fall, but the number of new cases has been on a decline since Nov 4.

The country of almost 10.7 million had 518,649 confirmed cases with 8,054 fatalities. The day-to-day increase of new cases reached 2,667 on Saturday.

11:02 a.m.: The NFL has fined the New Orleans Saints $500,000 and stripped them of a 2021 seventh-round draft pick for violating league COVID-19 protocols, a person with direct knowledge of the discipline told The Associated Press on Sunday.

The New England Patriots were fined $350,000 for similar violations, the person said, speaking to the AP on condition of anonymity because neither the league nor the teams have announced the fines or loss of draft pick.

New Orleans was fined as a repeat offender; Sean Payton previously was docked $150,000 and the team $250,000 because the head coach failed to properly wear a face covering during a game against the Raiders in Week 2. The more recent issue with the Saints came after a Week 9 win over Tampa Bay when the team’s celebrations included players not wearing masks while in close proximity to each other. The celebrations were captured on video by some players and posted to social media.

The Saints are expected to appeal the discipline, which ESPN first reported Sunday morning.

10:20 a.m.: When Kelly Lopes learned back in the spring that the Ontario government was ordering her teenaged children to stay home from school for their own safety but expected them and their parents to continue going to work, fear and anger set in almost immediately.

In the seven months since then, however, the grocery store cashier said those emotions have given way to a numbness she said is sustaining her as she battles through the COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario’s hardest-hit region.

She said that as the second wave has swelled to shocking heights in Brampton, Ont., her job has gotten harder and customers have gotten more combative.

“A lot of us are burnt out,” Lopes said Friday. “I get that we’re not paramedics or first responders, but we’re still a huge essential to a country that needs to eat. Without us being here, how do you get your food?”

Peel Region, just west of Toronto, has led the province in COVID-19 cases per capita for weeks now, with upwards of 180 new weekly cases per 100,000 residents — nearly triple the rate of the province as a whole.

Brampton makes up less than half of Peel’s population, but accounts for more than 60 per cent of its COVID-19 cases.

Read the full story by Nicole Thompson:

10:18 a.m.: Ontario is reporting 1,708 cases of , down for the second day in a row after hitting a record high of 1,855 cases Friday, and nearly 54,000 tests completed. Locally, there are 503 new cases in Peel, 463 in Toronto and 185 in York Region. There are 1,443 more resolved cases.

9:10 a.m. A little over a year from now, the TTC hopes to start work on a massive transit project beneath the heart of downtown Toronto.

The expansion of Bloor-Yonge station will cost an estimated $1.5 billion, take seven years to complete and require building a new subway platform, elevators, and escalators at an underground transit hub surrounded by dense commercial real estate, all while regular train service continues to operate.

Before the pandemic, the urgent need to expand Bloor-Yonge was evident to anyone who stood on its Line 1 subway platform on a weekday morning, when crowds of downtown commuters could grow dangerously large.

But during the pandemic, those crowds have thinned dramatically. With downtown office towers largely vacant and employers contemplating a shift to work-from-home, when commuters will return to the transit network and in what volume is anyone’s guess. With so much uncertainty, is it time to rethink expensive transit projects that were planned based on pre-pandemic travel patterns?

Read the full story by Toronto Star transportation reporter Ben Spurr:

8:47 a.m.: Curiosity runs rampant in the class as I moderate a discussion. This is going well. Next up in the lesson I want to show a video.

But wait. The audio won’t work. Is it the Wi-Fi? Is it an application glitch? How do I fix this? There’s a minute of intense inner stress before my students set me straight: “Ms. Smith, you have to have the video in the same window as your Google Meet and present from there, not your separate screen.”

Read the full story by Claire Smith here:

8:45 a.m.: Maryann Swain waves smoke from burning sage throughout the gym at the Gaagagekiizhik school, just as her grandmother taught her when they were being exposed to pathogens on their reserve. Today, in Ontario’s first Anishinaabe immersion school, the need to clear the room of negative energy is more urgent with the onset of .

“People are really scared here,” says Swain, an elder from Grassy Narrows First Nation. “Our people have seen plagues before.”

It’s a long-held tradition among the Ojibwe to disperse the negative energy before the annual fall feast, and at Gaagagekiizhik, where she teaches Indigenous youth about their culture they are reminded of a new challenge to ensuring the survival of their way of life.

Read the full story by Ryan Moore:

8:44 a.m.: Pope Francis is encouraging people to try to take away something good “even from the difficult situation that the pandemic forces on us.”

Addressing faithful gathered a safe distance apart in vast St. Peter’s Square on Sunday, Francis offered these suggestions: “greater sobriety, discrete and respectful attention to neighbours who might be in need, some moments of prayer in the family with simplicity.”

Francis said that “these three things will help us a lot.” During the COVID-19 pandemic, the pontiff has often highlighted the economic and social suffering of many.

7:59 a.m.: French churches, mosques and synagogues can open their doors again to worshippers, but only a few of them, as France cautiously starts reopening after a second virus lockdown.

Some churches may defy the 30-person limit which they believe is too unreasonable, and other sites may stay closed until they can fully reopen.

Farid Kachour, secretary general of the association running the mosque of Montermeil, a heavily immigrant suburb northeast of Paris, says that his mosque simply wouldn’t open as long as there is a 30-person limit.

“We can’t choose people” allowed to enter for prayer. “We don’t want to create discontent among the faithful,” he said.

Kachour noted that Muslims pray five times a day and that the mosque would need 40 services a day to allow all the faithful to pray.

7:15 a.m.: Cambodian officials say a family of six and another man tested positive for the coronavirus in a rare case of local infection, and Prime Minister Hun Sen expressed concern that the woman believed to be the source had travelled extensively in the country, including the capital.

The 56-year-old woman’s husband works at the Interior Ministry in charge of prisons. Hun Sen, who himself just emerged from isolation after he was exposed to the infected Hungarian foreign minister, said his three Cabinet ministers will get tested and self-quarantine.

The Health Ministry said in a statement that the woman tested positive three days after becoming feverish. She had been travelling between Siam Reap and Phnom Penh.

Hun Sen also ordered the temporary shutdown of a mall in Phnom Penh, which the woman visited last week.

Cambodia has had 315 confirmed cases of the virus since the pandemic began, most of them acquired abroad.

In other developments in the Asia-Pacific region:

— Hong Kong has reported 115 new coronavirus infections, the first time it has seen cases in the triple digits since Aug. 2. The government on Sunday also announced that classes at kindergarten, primary and secondary schools will be shut for the rest of the year in light of the worsening coronavirus situation in the city. Of the 115 infections reported Sunday, 24 were untraceable. Another 62 were linked to recent outbreaks in dance studios across the city. Employees and recent guests at three restaurants in the city have also been ordered to undergo compulsory testing after multiple positive cases had been linked to the venues. Hong Kong has reported 6,239 coronavirus infections since the pandemic began, with 109 deaths.

— South Korea is shutting down indoor gyms offering intense workout classes and banning year-end parties at hotels in the greater Seoul area to fight the virus. Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said Sunday authorities will also ban the operation of private music institutes teaching singing and wind instruments and saunas at public bath houses in the capital area. He said fitness centres, cafes and libraries operating inside apartment complexes will also be closed. The new steps will be effective from Tuesday. The country reported 450 new cases on Sunday.

— India has reported 41,180 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, with the daily toll staying below the 50,000-mark for the fourth week. New Delhi also got some respite as it added fewer than 5,000 cases for the first time in a month. The New Delhi government decided that half its employees, barring senior officials, will be allowed to work from home starting Monday. India reported another 496 deaths in the past 24 hours, raising the death toll to 136,696. India’s confirmed cases since the pandemic began are more than 9.3 million, second behind the U.S.

— A Chinese factory owned by South Korean semiconductor firm SK Hynix has halted operations after an employee was found to be infected with the coronavirus. According to state-owned Xinhua News Agency, the South Korean national worked in a plant in the southwestern city of Chongqing. He travelled to South Korea on Thursday. He displayed no symptoms, but was found to be infected with the virus when he was tested at Incheon airport in Seoul. The factory has been closed, and employees have been isolated and tested, Xinhua reported. The hotel where the employee lived in Chongqing has also been temporarily shut and hotel employees and recent guests were tracked down and tested. Chongqing has so far tested 3,283 people, and 2,674 have been found to be negative. China has so far reported a total of 86,512 confirmed coronavirus infections, with 4,634 deaths. China does not include asymptomatic cases in its tally.

7:11 a.m.: When Turkey changed the way it reports daily COVID-19 infections, it confirmed what medical groups and opposition parties have long suspected — that the country is faced with an alarming surge of cases that is fast exhausting the Turkish health system.

In an about-face, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government this week resumed reporting all positive coronavirus tests — not just the number of patients being treated for symptoms — pushing the number of daily cases to above 30,000. With the new data, the country jumped from being one of the least-affected countries in Europe to one of the worst-hit.

That came as no surprise to the Turkish Medical Association, which has been warning for months that the government’s previous figures were concealing the graveness of the spread and that the lack of transparency was contributing to the surge. The group maintains, however, that the ministry’s figures are still low compared with its estimate of at least 50,000 new infections per day.

No country can report exact numbers on the spread of the disease since many asymptomatic cases go undetected, but the previous way of counting made Turkey look relatively well-off in international comparisons, with daily new cases far below those reported in European countries including Italy, Britain and France.

That changed Wednesday as Turkey’s daily caseload almost quadrupled from about 7,400 to 28,300.

The country’s hospitals are overstretched, medical staff are burned out and contract tracers, who were once credited for keeping the outbreak under check, are struggling to track transmissions, Sebnem Korur Fincanci, who heads the association, told The Associated Press.

“It’s the perfect storm,” said Fincanci, whose group has come under attack from Erdogan and his nationalist allies for questioning the government’s figures and its response to the outbreak.

Even though the health minister has put the ICU bed occupancy rate at 70%, Ebru Kiraner, who heads the Istanbul-based Intensive Care Nurses’ Association, says intensive care unit beds in Istanbul’s hospitals are almost full, with doctors scrambling to find room for critically ill patients.

There is a shortage of nurses and the existing nursing staff is exhausted, she added.

“ICU nurses have not been able to return to their normal lives since March,” she told the AP. “Their children have not seen their mask-less faces in months.”

Erdogan said, however, there was “no problem” concerning the hospitals’ capacities. He blamed the surge on the public’s failure to wear masks, which is mandatory, and to abide by social distancing rules.

Demonstrating the seriousness of the outbreak, Turkey last month suspended leave for health care workers and temporarily banned resignations and early retirements during the pandemic. Similar bans were also put in place for three months in March.

The official daily COVID-19 deaths have also steadily risen to record numbers, reaching 13,373 on Saturday with 182 new deaths, in a reversal of fortune for the country that had been praised for managing to keep fatalities low. But those record numbers remain disputed too.

Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu said 186 people had died of infectious diseases in the city on Nov. 22 — a day on which the government announced just 139 COVID-19 deaths for the whole of the country. The mayor also said around 450 burials are taking place daily in the city of 15 million compared with the average 180-200 recorded in November the previous year.

“We can only beat the outbreak through a process that is transparent,” said Imamoglu, who is from Turkey’s main opposition party. “Russia and Germany have announced a high death toll. Did Germany lose its shine? Did Russia collapse?”

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca has rejected Imamoglu’s claims, saying: “I want to underline that all of the figures I am providing are accurate.”

Last week, Erdogan announced a series of restrictions in a bid to contain the contagion without impacting the already weakened economy or business activity. Opposition parties denounced them as “half-baked.” He introduced curfews for the first time since June, but limited them to weekend evenings, closed down restaurants and cafes except for takeout services and restricted the opening hours of malls, shops and hairdressers.

Both Fincanci and Kiraner said the measures don’t go far enough to contain transmissions.

“We need a total lockdown of at least two weeks, if not four weeks which science considers to be the most ideal amount,” Fincanci said.

Koca has said that the number of seriously ill patients and fatalities is on the rise and said some cities including Istanbul and Izmir are experiencing their “third peak.” Turkey would wait, however, for two weeks to see the results of the weekend curfews and other restrictions before considering stricter lockdowns, he said.

Meanwhile, the country has reached an agreement to receive 50 million doses of the vaccine developed by Chinese pharmaceutical company SinoVac and hopes to begin administering it to medical staff and the chronically ill next month. It is also in talks to purchase the vaccine developed by Pfizer in co-operation with the BioNTech pharmaceutical company. A Turkish-developed vaccine is scheduled to be ready to use in April.

Erdogan said he had also spoken with Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, over the possibility of procuring a vaccine developed by that country.

7:00 a.m.: The federal government is laying plans for the procurement and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines, inking contracts with seven potential manufacturers and saying six million doses could arrive in the country in the first quarter of 2021. The most recent development from Ottawa came Friday when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tapped former NATO commander Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin to lead the national distribution effort. But various provinces have started spelling out their plans as well. Here’s a look at what they’ve said so far:

Nova Scotia’s chief medical officer of health says he will release a detailed plan for the distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine once Ottawa shares more information.

Dr. Robert Strang said Friday there is no certainty yet about the availability of a vaccine, but expressed hopes an initial supply will trickle into Nova Scotia early in the new year.

Strang said a detailed provincial plan, to be released once the federal government has shared more specifics on its end, will include tight control of the supply and clear rules dictating who can be first in line for immunization.

He said he’s waiting for more federal guidance on issues ranging from priority groups to transportation and storage logistics.

Quebec will be ready to start rolling out its vaccine plan as of Jan. 1, say senior politicians.

Premier Francois Legault said Thursday that public health officials have already settled on the list of priority vaccine recipients, but did not release details.

Legault said the province is also working to put the necessary infrastructure in place to support a vaccine rollout. That includes obtaining fridges capable of maintaining the extremely low temperatures needed by one of the most promising potential vaccine options, currently in development through pharmaceutical giant Pfizer.

Quebec has also tasked assistant deputy health minister Jerome Gagnon

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is among those leaders calling on Ottawa to provide more clarity as officials scramble to develop a provincewide vaccination strategy.

Early speculation on the number of doses the province could receive was put to rest earlier this week when federal Health Minister Patty Hajdu said such details were still in the works.

But Ford has forged ahead, naming former chief of national defence Gen. Rick Hillier to oversee the province’s vaccine rollout.

Hillier said on Friday he hopes to have a plan developed by year’s end, while Ford urged Ottawa to provide detailed information on potential vaccine delivery.

“We need a clear line of sight into the timelines of the shipments,” Ford said.

Alberta’s top medical official has said she expects to receive 680,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine early in the new year, a figure not yet confirmed by the federal government.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw has also said a number of hurdles and unknowns remain as the province works to devise its vaccination scheme.

“These (vaccine) numbers, of course, depend on many factors,’’ Hinshaw said on Nov. 18. “They depend on the final pieces of the trials that are underway going well. They depend on ensuring that the safety and the effectiveness of the early vaccines can be assured. All of those checks and balances must be cleared.”

On Friday, Hinshaw said the province is working with Ottawa to get vaccine, but it is “a bit of a moving target” on when vaccines might be available.

“But our goal is that whenever vaccine is available, we will be ready to start immunizing individuals on that highest priority list.”

Provincial health officials in B.C. announced on Wednesday that a vaccine strategy for the province is already in the works.

Dr. Bonnie Henry, the province’s top doctor, said Dr. Ross Brown of Vancouver Coastal Health will join the group working to organize the logistics around the distribution of vaccines.

Henry said front-line workers as well as those in long-term care homes will likely have priority for vaccinations.

She cautioned that while the province has contracts with vaccine makers, there can be challenges with offshore manufacturing.

“It’s very much focused on who is most at risk and how do we protect them best,” Henry said. “There’s a lot of discussion that needs to happen.”

Henry said the province hopes to have vaccines in hand by January.

Yukon Premier Sandy Silver told the legislature on Wednesday that the territory has been in discussions with various levels of government on a vaccine rollout plan.

He said the goal will be to provide vaccines to elderly people and health-care providers.

Silver said rural and remote communities should also get priority status in northern regions, a fact he said he’s emphasized with federal authorities.

The premier said he has joined the other provincial and territorial leaders in pushing for a national strategy to distribute the vaccine.

“How confusing would it be for 13 different strategies right across the nation?” he said.

Silver said the Pfizer vaccine could cause logistical problems for remote communities because of its cold-storage requirements, but those issues may not apply to other vaccines under development.

4:00 a.m.: The latest numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Canada as of 4:00 a.m. EST on Nov. 29, 2020:

There are 364,798 confirmed cases in Canada.

_ Quebec: 139,643 confirmed (including 7,021 deaths, 120,906 resolved)

_ Ontario: 113,038 confirmed (including 3,624 deaths, 95,876 resolved)

_ Alberta: 54,836 confirmed (including 524 deaths, 39,381 resolved)

_ British Columbia: 30,884 confirmed (including 395 deaths, 21,304 resolved)

_ Manitoba: 16,118 confirmed (including 290 deaths, 6,804 resolved)

_ Saskatchewan: 7,888 confirmed (including 45 deaths, 4,521 resolved)

_ Nova Scotia: 1,271 confirmed (including 65 deaths, 1,078 resolved)

_ New Brunswick: 481 confirmed (including 7 deaths, 363 resolved)

_ Newfoundland and Labrador: 333 confirmed (including 4 deaths, 297 resolved)

_ Nunavut: 164 confirmed (including 33 resolved)

_ Prince Edward Island: 72 confirmed (including 68 resolved)

_ Yukon: 42 confirmed (including 1 death, 29 resolved)

_ Northwest Territories: 15 confirmed (including 15 resolved)

_ Repatriated Canadians: 13 confirmed (including 13 resolved)

_ Total: 364,798 (0 presumptive, 364,798 confirmed including 11,976 deaths, 290,688 resolved)

Read Saturday’s developments .

Today’s coronavirus news: Ontario’s 7-day average for new cases above 400 for first time since May, according to Star count; Toronto cancels major outdoor events for rest of 2020

The latest news from Canada and around the world Wednesday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.

7:18 p.m.: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is promising to do more to help provinces respond to soaring demands for COVID-19 testing but there is still no indication of when the government will approve the tests that can deliver results in mere minutes.

Health Minister Patty Hajdu has said her department isn’t satisfied that the testing systems submitted for approval yield accurate enough results.

In Wednesday’s throne speech, the government said it is “pursuing every technology and every option for faster tests for Canadians.” Once they are approved, the government promises to deploy them quickly, and is creating a “testing assistance response team” in the meantime to help with the insatiable growth in demand.

“Canadians should not be waiting in line for hours to get a test,” Gov. Gen. Julie Payette read from the speech Wednesday.

6:49 p.m.: The owners of a private long-term care home in suburban Montreal where dozens of residents died during the COVID-19 pandemic in March and April displayed “organizational negligence,” according to a new report.

The Quebec government released the report into Residence Herron on Wednesday, as well as a separate report that looked into a public long-term care home north of Montreal where 100 residents died.

In total, 38 people died at Residence Herron between March 26 and April 16, including 23 who died in less than a week between April 5 and 10, the report states.

Commissioned by the provincial government, the investigation concludes that authorities at Herron repeatedly failed to address shortcomings noted in prior inspection reports and in a coroner’s report, largely because of vacancies in key posts and a turnover rate that reached 20 per cent a year.

“It is clear with such a turnover of staff, things must continually be redone,” the report reads.

The report details the chaos that followed the discovery of a first case of COVID-19 on March 26, and its devastating effects on a residence that was described as ill-prepared to confront a pandemic.

6:30 p.m.: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says families won’t likely be able to gather for Thanksgiving, but it’s not too late to save Christmas.

In an address to Canadians on the state of the COVID-19 pandemic, he says the actions we take now will determine the course of the virus in Canada through the fall.

He says a second wave is underway in four provinces, with national daily case counts having tripled the last few weeks, and the fall could be much worse than the spring.

He says we got the pandemic under control then and we can do it again if we keep wearing masks, use the government’s exposure-alert app and obey other public health instructions.

6:12 p.m. Public Health Ontario’s says its lab is “currently unable to access or issue patient test results,” citing an “unexpected outage.”

“Some laboratory test reports may be delayed as a result. If you require assistance, please call our Customer Service Centre at to leave a message or speak to an agent. We are working to get back to normal operations as fast as possible and will post updates here,” the site says. “We apologize for the inconvenience.”

5:30 p.m. Ontario’s regional health units are reporting slightly fewer new cases than their recent average on Wednesday, according to the Star’s latest count.

As of 5 p.m., the health units were reporting another 373 new confirmed or probable cases, slightly below a trend that has seen the rate of new infections grow at an accelerating pace since early August.

The province’s seven-day average for new cases is now at 403 new cases daily, the first time that rate has been above 400 since late May, and double what the health units were reporting just 10 days ago on Sept. 13.

Ontario last saw such rapid exponential growth before the pandemic’s first peak in the spring. Although Ontario is still well below that peak level — about 600 infections a day, reported in late April — the current rate of case growth, if sustained, would see the average eclipse that rate by early October.

Wednesday saw significant case totals reported across the province: Toronto reported 129 new cases; Ottawa reported 65; Peel Region had 62; York Regions added 35; Waterloo Region 17; Middlesex-London 12 and Halton Region 11.

The province has now seen a total of 50,417 confirmed or probable cases of COVID-19, including 2,876 deaths.

Four fatal cases were reported in the last 24 hours. Two in Peel Region and one each in Ottawa and Hamilton.

The vast majority of the province’s COVID-19 patients have since recovered, and the recent rise in cases has not yet resulted in an equivalent jump in hospitalizations or deaths. That’s in part because the recent increase has not yet hit the vulnerable outbreak settings — like long-term-care homes — . Rates of hospitalization and death have also tended to lag behind weeks behind case jumps.

The province lists 3,652 active cases of the disease, a number that has been rising in recent weeks.

The Star’s count includes some patients reported as “probable” COVID-19 cases, meaning they have symptoms and contacts or travel history that indicate , but have not yet received a positive lab test.

The province cautions its separate data, published daily at 10:30 a.m., may be , saying that in the event of a discrepancy, “data reported by (the health units) should be considered the most up to date.”

4:58 p.m. Quebec has begun rolling out a COVID-19 advertising campaign aimed at putting a human face on the deadly virus and reaching those who discount its severity.

The ads — the first of which was released Tuesday night — include testimonials of those impacted directly by COVID-19.

In the first spot, the camera focuses on Francis, a general contractor who recounts spending 45 days in hospital, including 12 in a coma. He underwent a tracheotomy and now breathes through an opening in his neck.

“Believe me,” he concludes, “COVID-19 is serious.”

With public health officials saying the province hit hardest by COVID-19 is experiencing a second wave, efforts have intensified to reach a segment of the population that has felt the virus’s risk is overhyped.

But some marketing experts do not believe the government is striking the right tone or that the message will reach the right people.

“Fear is not a good motivator,” said Benoit Duguay, a professor in the Université du Québec à Montreal’s school of management.

“You’re going to scare the wrong people. You are going to scare the people who are already scared and the people who are not scared, it will not change their attitude or behaviour in any way, form or fashion.”

The other issue is that the recent spike in infections has been most pronounced among younger people, who won’t necessarily see themselves in the first advertisement featuring a middle-aged contractor.

2:45 p.m. Prince Edward Island is reporting one new case of COVID-19, for a total of 58 in the province.

Health officials say the new case involves a woman in her 20s who arrived to the Island on Sept. 20 from outside the country.

The province says the woman came to the province for work that is not related to the health-care sector and has been isolating since her arrival, so the risk of transmission is very low.

Officials are asking anyone on flight AC128 from Vancouver to Toronto and flight AC7460 from Toronto to Charlottetown to monitor themselves for symptoms of COVID-19.

2:15 p.m. (updated) The City of Toronto has announced the cancellation of a number of outdoor major events until the end of the year in an effort to curb the spread of COVID-19.

This decision follows the cancellation of all such events up to Sept. 30 announced by the City in July. Some City-led and City-permitted outdoor major events have already announced the cancellation of their event this year due to COVID-19 while others, such as the Santa Claus parade, will be announcing alternative plans in the near future.

The City’s Cavalcade of Lights and New Year’s Eve celebration on Nathan Phillips Square are among the events cancelled.

Events moving online include Nuit Blanche and CIBC Run for the Cure.

2 p.m. Manitoba has announced 42 new cases of COVID-19 in the province, saying the number of people testing positive in the capital city continues to surge.

Thirty of the cases are in the Winnipeg health region and the province announced possible exposures at restaurants, bars and during a trivia night at a pub.

The province also announced confirmed cases in three more schools, but said the infections were not acquired in the classroom and the risk for transmission there is low.

There are 11 people in hospital and five are in the intensive care unit.

There have been 1,674 cases in Manitoba and 18 people have died.

1:45 p.m. New Brunswick is reporting one new case of COVID-19 today.

Health officials say the new case is an individual between 60 and 69 years old in the Miramichi region.

They say the case is related to travel from outside of the Atlantic bubble and the individual is self-isolating.

The number of confirmed cases in New Brunswick is 197 and 191 people have recovered, while there have been two deaths and four cases are still considered active.

1:10 p.m. (updated) Premier Doug Ford says up to 60 pharmacies across the province will begin to offer COVID-19 tests starting Friday.

He says the initiative will reduce pressure on the province’s 147 assessment centres, some of which have seen long line-ups in recent weeks.

The pharmacies will only test individuals with no symptoms after they have made an appointment.The testing initiative is the second part of the government’s fall pandemic preparedness plan.

Ford also says three Ontario hospitals will begin offering saliva testing.

12:54 p.m. Ontario’s education minister says he is considering shortening the list of COVID-19 symptoms that require kids to stay home from school.

Stephen Lecce says he is working with the province’s medical officials to consider possible changes to the list.

British Columbia shortened its list earlier this week by removing 10 symptoms, prompting Ontario to review the data behind that decision.

Officials in B.C. removed symptoms such as a sore throat, runny nose, and headaches from their list.

Ontario’s school reopening plan requires parents to screen their children for COVID-19 symptoms and keep them home if they display signs of the virus.

Students are permitted to return to class when they no longer display symptoms.

12:42 p.m. More than 400 schools in Quebec and another 153 in Ontario are reporting at least one case of coronavirus disease.

The figures from the group COVID Ecoles Quebec and the Ontario government come as authorities across Canada battle a second wave of COVID-19.

Data from Ontario show cases among people in their 20s have risen sharply in recent months.

One expert attributes the increase among younger Canadians in part to the reopening of schools and universities.

Several provinces and universities have warned of stiff fines for violating anti-COVID restrictions.

However, Quebec says it will not allow police to enter homes without a warrant to break up gatherings that violate the measures.

In all, COVID has killed about 9,250 people in Canada, as the cumulative case count edged toward the 150,000 mark.

12:35 p.m. Despite the steady rise of COVID-19 cases in a country already hard-hit by the virus, Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes said Wednesday that mask requirements, some attendance limits and other public health measures will be relaxed as part of a less stringent, long-term coronavirus strategy.

Wilmes said Belgium residents should learn to live with the virus but warned against a “widespread slackening” of the basic social-distancing rules.

“We are in a risk-management phase,” she said after a National Security Council meeting. “Some rules will be relaxed because they are no longer useful or tenable.”

Starting next month, Belgium no longer will require wearing a mask outdoors except in crowded places where social distancing cannot be practiced. The government also is reducing the mandatory quarantine period from 14 days to one week for people with COVID-19 symptoms who eventually test negative for the virus.

While a maximum of 10 guests will remain the rule for private gatherings, parties or weddings hosted by professional organizers won’t be subject to the limit.

12:23 p.m. Canada’s chief public health officer says the country saw an average of 1,123 new COVID-19 cases each day over the past week, compared to 380 cases reported daily in mid-August.

Dr. Theresa Tam says that increase is cause for real concern as Canada is now on track for what she describes as a “big resurgence” in several provinces.

Tam says while the new cases continue to be primarily among young adults, the impacts affect the entire population.

Tam did offer one bit of good news as the number of daily laboratory tests conducted the country has increased to almost 70,000 over the past week, with 1.4 per cent of people testing positive for the illness.

12:18 p.m. A Halloween night that falls on both a Saturday and a full moon would normally be ideal for spooky festivities, driving up sales of candy, costumes and decorations.

But with cases of on the rise, experts expect retailers to see soft demand for Halloween supplies as plans are scaled back and trick-or-treating is questioned altogether.

They add that sales related to the spooky celebration may also serve as an indicator for what retailers can expect this Christmas, the largest shopping season of the year.

Farla Efros, president of HRC Retail Advisory, says Halloween is a significant portion of business for many retailers and candy makers.

She says the lack of gatherings, office parties and trick-or-treating could lead to soft sales for retailers from grocers to specialty Halloween pop-up stores.

11:45 a.m. A hospital in Kitchener, Ont., says it has closed its drive-through COVID-19 testing centre for the day over concerns for the safety of its staff and the public.

The Grand River Hospital says vehicles began to line up at 2:30 a.m. Wednesday morning, five hours before opening time.

Spokeswoman Cheryl Evans says that by 7:30 a.m., traffic was backed up on all the nearby side streets and the centre was already at capacity.

She says some people in line were getting impatient and displayed some “aggressive behaviours,” which contributed to the decision to temporarily shut down.

The hospital says those currently in line will be tested.

The centre is expected to reopen Thursday.

11:16 a.m. The Durham Region Health Department resulted in 34 people in Durham receiving false positive COVID-19 results this past weekend.

That includes, one at Pierre Elliott Trudeau P.S. and one at Maple Ridge P.S.

The Maple Ridge result prompted the health department to declare an outbreak at the school on Sept. 19 because it represented a third positive case.

The decision to declare an outbreak has been reversed.

11:15 a.m. The number of new active cases in publicly funded schools across the province has jumped by another 30 per cent to a total of 180.

, the province reported 42 more school-related cases — 21 more students were infected for a total of 77; five more staff members for a total of 38 and 16 more individuals who weren’t identified for a total of 65.

There are 153 schools with a current case, which the province notes is 3.17 per cent of the 4,828 publicly funded schools.

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11:10 a.m. Quebec is reporting 471 new cases of COVID-19 and four additional deaths attributed to the novel coronavirus.

Health officials said one of the deaths was reported in the past 24 hours while three others occurred between Sept. 16-21.

Hospitalizations increased by ten patients for a total of 178, with 30 of those in intensive care.

The province has now reported 69,088 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 5,809 deaths linked to the virus.

10:55 a.m. Ontario is reporting 335 new cases of COVID-19 today, along with three new deaths related to the virus.

Health Minister Christine Elliott says there are 102 cases reported in Toronto, 79 in Peel Region and 65 in Ottawa.

She says 69 per cent of the new cases are in people under the age of 40.

The province is reporting an additional 258 cases as resolved today.

10:55 a.m. Quebec will not send police into homes without a warrant to break up house parties or private gatherings that don’t respect COVID-19 rules.

Public Security Minister Genevieve Guilbault said today the province is not looking at giving police such powers at this time.

On Tuesday, Quebec Health Minister Christian Dube said the government had not ruled out allowing police to intervene without a warrant, but it would be a last resort.

The province is into a second wave of COVID-19 cases with much of the transmission in the community being driven by private events and gatherings.

10:35 a.m. (updated) Toronto police said 14 people in Scarborough were fined $880 each Tuesday night after officers were called for a “noisy party” in the Kingston Road and St. Clair Avenue East area.

Police said there were about 50 people at the party.

Officers issued 14 provincial offence notices under the Reopening Ontario Act for failure to comply with an order.

“Blatant disregard of rules meant to protect us all,” said Const. Randall Arsenault in a about the incident.

Police said during their investigation, a man was arrested on an outstanding warrant and transported to Halton police.

The Reopening Ontario Act extended specific emergency orders in the province. The provincial government announced on Sept. 17 that there would be new gathering limits in Toronto to 10 people indoors and 25 outdoors in a bid to curb the increasing spread of COVID-19.

10:19 a.m. Ontario is reporting 335 new cases of COVID-19 Wednesday, along with three new deaths related to the virus.

Health Minister Christine Elliott says there are 102 cases reported in Toronto, 79 in Peel Region and 65 in Ottawa.She says 69 per cent of the new cases are in people under the age of 40. The province is reporting an additional 258 cases as resolved today.

The total number of cases in Ontario now stands at 48,087, which includes 2,835 deaths and 41,600 cases classified as resolved.

The province says it processed 35,436 tests over the previous day, with another 48,079 under investigation.

The latest numbers come as the Progressive Conservative government is expected to reveal another part of its fall pandemic preparedness plan today.

Yesterday Premier Doug Ford announced that the first part of the strategy involved spending $70 million to purchase millions of seasonal flu shots, which he encouraged all residents to get.

Opposition critics slammed the message, saying it wasn’t nearly enough to address rising COVID-19 case numbers across the province.

Meanwhile, the government says it will hire 98 new labour inspectors this fall as part of efforts to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in workplaces.

9:43 a.m. After postponing several shows because of the coronavirus pandemic, Elton John is saying hello to the yellow brick road of touring.

The pop icon announced Wednesday that his “Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour” will return to North America on Jan. 19, 2022, in New Orleans. John also announced rescheduled 2022 dates for Houston, Detroit, New York City, Miami, Toronto and Montreal.

In July John announced new dates in Europe. His global tour will officially return on September 1, 2021 in Berlin.

“I’ve been enjoying my time at home with the family while the world navigates its way through the COVID pandemic. But, I really miss being on the road and performing for my beloved fans in my Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour,” John said. “While the scientists are making great progress, we are making big plans for a return to touring that will allow us to ensure the health and safety of everyone.”

9:40 a.m. Two oil-rich Arab Gulf states suffered severe economic blows on Wednesday, as a major credit agency downgraded Kuwait for the first time and the United Arab Emirates acknowledged its economy would contract to a level last seen in 2009.

The agency, Moody’s Investors Service, cut Kuwait’s debt rating and sounded the alarm that its “liquid resources are nearing depletion.” With the government failing to pass a public debt law, Kuwait has drawn from its reserve fund to keep spending — at a pace that could prove unsustainable. Moody’s warned that government “gridlock” and ineffective debt management would erode Kuwait’s financial strength in the years ahead.

Even if Kuwait managed to push through a debt law without a ceiling, Moody’s projects that some $90 billion (U.S.) would still be needed to plug the funding gap until 2024. Despite growing “liquidity risks,” Kuwait’s government has not sought access to its sovereign wealth fund, one of the largest in the world, intended as fortune for future generations after the oil runs out.

Meanwhile, the UAE’s Central Bank reported the country saw a “significant decline in economic activity” as a result of its COVID-19 lockdown, one of the strictest in the world. Virus-induced restrictions closed borders, grounded flights, shuttered businesses and disrupted global supply chains — upending the economic foundation of the region’s “trade, tourism and transportation hub,” the bank’s quarterly review said.

9:39 a.m. French tennis player Benoit Paire was allowed to compete at the Hamburg Open despite twice testing positive for the coronavirus, he said Wednesday.

Paire retired from his opening-round match while trailing Casper Ruud 6-4, 2-0 on Wednesday, but it was unclear why.

Paire withdrew from the U.S. Open after testing positive and spending more than a week in isolation. He then played at the Italian Open last week, losing in the first round.

According to German news agency dpa, Paire said he twice tested positive while in Hamburg but then had a negative test. Paire said he was not sure if he would play at the French Open, which begins Sunday, and would end his season early if he wasn’t allowed to compete.

9:07 a.m. Tokyo Olympics officials are proposing that the government relax immigration regulations to allow athletes to enter the country before next year’s postponed games and train during a 14-day quarantine period, Toshiro Muto, the CEO of the organizing committee said on Wednesday.

“We have to consider the uniqueness of the athletes and also their activities,” Muto said, speaking in Japanese following a meeting of a task force considering countermeasures against the COVID-19 pandemic.

The International Olympic Committee, Tokyo city and national government officials, and members of the organizing committee are holding virtual meetings on Thursday and Friday focused on finding ways to hold the delayed Olympics during a pandemic.

The organizing committee and the IOC have said for months they are considering many scenarios for how the games can open on July 23, 2021, but have offered nothing specific.

IOC President Thomas Bach, who will address the online meetings on Thursday, has said a vaccine and rapid testing would help, but added there is no “silver bullet” that will allow the Olympics to automatically happen.

9:03 a.m. Germany’s coronavirus tracing app has been used to transmit 1.2 million test results from labs to users during its first 100 days, officials said Wednesday.

The Corona-Warn-App, downloaded more than 18 million times since its launch in June, was touted by the government as a key tool in the country’s effort to contain the spread of the virus.

The app, like others in Europe, has suffered a number of technical hiccups, but Health Minister Jens Spahn insisted it should be considered a success. He noted that most app users can now get their COVID-19 test result sent directly to their smartphones, without having to wait for their doctor to inform them.

“The faster transmission of test results makes a huge difference,” Spahn said, adding that the tracing of possible contacts is all the more effective the sooner it begins.

Almost 5,000 people with positive test results have so far used the app to warn others they were in close contact with, he said.

8:41 a.m. The International Judo Federation has cancelled an event in Japan because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The IJF had announced a return to international competition after a months-long pause with Grand Slam events in Budapest, Hungary, next month and in Japan in December. They were intended to be part of qualification for the postponed Tokyo Olympics.

The Budapest competition now needs to be confirmed within two weeks “pending on a decision from the Hungarian government.”

8:29 a.m. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will make a televised national address Wednesday night within hours of Parliament’s resumption to speak to Canadians about the “urgency of fighting COVID-19.”

Trudeau’s office approached television broadcasters Tuesday to request airtime to address the nation, his office said, “as we face down the prospect of a second wave of the virus.

The prime minister will also give “a summary of the government’s plans in the throne speech to fight the virus and build our economic recovery,” said his spokesman Cameron Ahmad in a statement to media.

A senior Liberal government official told the Star that the rise in coronavirus infections has put Canada at a “very risky crossroads.”

“We’re basically at war here,” said the official.

8:28 a.m. As a feared second wave of infections appears to be arriving in Ontario and Quebec, insiders say Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government will lay out a plan to curb the spread of COVID-19 and get Canada through and beyond the pandemic.

Parliament returns to work Wednesday with a “hefty” throne speech that sources said has three goals: fight and curb the immediate health crisis, provide economic support for individuals and hard-hit sectors through the medium-term, and a longer term economic agenda for “a resilient and strong Canada.”

One senior Liberal official, speaking on background, said the pandemic period will last “much longer than any one of us would like,” and the government’s plan for the recovery will promote longer-term job creation through “cleaner economic growth,” along with “inclusive” social measures and health-care investments “that are necessary to support that economic growth.”

7:15 a.m. After 27 years of operation, Laser Quest is closing stores across Canada, it said in a statement on Tuesday.

“As much as we wanted to re-open, the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting uncertain economic climate have made the continued operation of Laser Quest North America next to impossible,” the company said. The laser tag site has often played host to birthday parties and other events in venues across Canada and the U.S.

“Over the past 27 years Laser Quest has brought fun to life with countless birthday parties, day camp and youth group events, plus numerous corporate and educational outings.”

Though, according to their website, some of their centres will reopen in the future under new leadership.

6:40 a.m. Health authorities in Madrid may extend to more communities the restrictions on movement it imposed on areas of the Spanish capital with high coronavirus infection rates.

About 860,000 Madrid residents already are required to justify trips out of 37 neighbourhoods, mostly working-class areas. People have complained that the restrictions stigmatize the poor.

The region’s deputy health chief, Antonio Zapatero, said Wednesday that a decision on additional measures, including possible customer limits in restaurants, would be announced on Friday,

Zapatero said the outbreak situation in the Madrid region, which has a population of 6.6 million, was one of “sustained increase.”

Madrid had a contagion rate of 772 cases per 100,000 inhabitants in 14 days, nearly three times Spain’s national average of 287 cases per 100,000.

5:31 a.m. The British government is defending its strategy for combating a second wave of coronavirus infections from criticism that new restrictions didn’t go far enough to stop the exponential spread of the virus.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled a slate of new rules on Tuesday to stem the renewed outbreak, including a 10 p.m. curfew on bars and restaurants, increased use of face masks and again encouraging people to work from home.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told Sky News on Wednesday that the government’s approach was “focused, balanced and proportionate.” He says that if everyone complies with the measures, they will be enough to prevent a second national lockdown “with all the impact on society and families but also the damage it would do to businesses.”

Many health experts said the government’s plan wouldn’t be enough to stop the rapid spread of COVID-19 infections.

The dean of epidemiology and population health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, John Edmunds, says the government needs to quickly impose much wider restrictions or risk losing control of the virus.

5:28 a.m. India reported more than 83,000 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday, showing some decline after reaching a record a week earlier.

The country has now confirmed more than 5.6 million cases. The health ministry also reported 1,085 new fatalities, raising the death toll to 90,020.

India is expected to become the world’s worst-hit country within weeks, surpassing the United States, where nearly 6.9 million people have been infected by the virus.

But the past week has seen some improvement in India, with the numbers dropping after a record 97,894 new cases were reported on Sept. 16.

5:20 a.m. Israel on Wednesday reported a new record level of daily cases of coronavirus, shortly before government officials were to meet to discuss tightening a new nationwide lockdown.

The Health Ministry reported 6,861 new cases Wednesday as a raging outbreak showed no signs of slowing. Israel, a country of some 9 million people, now has one of the world’s highest rates of coronavirus on a per capita basis, and health officials say hospitals are quickly approaching capacity.

The government last week imposed a nationwide lockdown that closed schools, shopping malls, hotels and restaurants. The coronavirus cabinet was meeting later Wednesday to discuss further tightening the restrictions.

Israel won international praise for its handling of the outbreak last spring, moving quickly to seal its borders and impose a lockdown that appeared to contain the virus. But the government reopened the economy too quickly, and a new outbreak has quickly spread throughout the summer. The economy, meanwhile, has not recovered from a serious downturn caused by the first lockdown.

The Health Ministry has instructed hospitals to delay non-essential surgeries and to open additional coronavirus wards as the number of serious cases continues to rise.

5:14 a.m. An Austrian consumer protection group said Wednesday it has filed four civil lawsuits against the country’s government for failing to contain a coronavirus outbreak at an Alpine ski resort during the early phase of the pandemic that has been blamed for thousands of infections around the world.

Peter Kolba, who heads the VSV consumer association, said the four cases —involving an Austrian and three Germans — will test the ground for a further 1,000 people who have asked to be represented by the group after falling ill with COVID-19 following a trip to Ischgl in February and March.

The outbreak in Ischgl, a resort in western Austria that’s popular with skiers across Europe, is considered one of the earliest ‘superspreader’ events on the continent.

5:09 a.m. The first day of the B.C. election campaign featured conflicting views on just how well the three parties were getting along in the minority legislature.

NDP Leader John Horgan says he called the election because he feared “contempt” and “acrimony” between the parties would divert focus away from the COVID-19 pandemic, making an election necessary.

He also wasn’t sure the minority NDP government would be able to pass a budget in February with the prospect of a confidence vote forcing an election.

But Green Leader Sonia Furstenau disputes Horgan’s take on how things were going, adding she told him as recently as Friday that her party was committed to a stable government.

B.C. Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson, meanwhile, called for three televised debates during the Oct. 24 election campaign so voters can hear what each party has to offer.

5:05 a.m. A promised reset of federal priorities to focus on the COVID-19 pandemic begins today with the Liberal government’s speech from the throne. The nearly hour-long speech is expected to address three areas: immediate action to push back against a second wave of the pandemic, supports for those still not back on their feet after the first wave, and how the economy might be further rebuilt once it can stand more on its own.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s plan comes as public health officials are warning the country is but a few house parties away from plunging into a full-blown second wave.

He’s expected to address that potential crisis in a televised address Wednesday night following the throne speech.

4 a.m. Ontario says it will hire 98 new labour inspectors this fall as part of efforts to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in workplaces.

Labour Minister Monte McNaughton says the government will begin to recruit the workers in October.

The hiring blitz will increase the number of government inspectors from 409 to 507 and will cost $11.6 million.

McNaughton says the inspectors will allow the government to respond faster to situations that may arise during the pandemic.

Labour inspectors investigate workplace hazards, injuries, fatalities and work refusals.

Tuesday 8:45 p.m. A faculty member at Branksome Hall and two students at The York School have tested positive for , as confirmed by notices put out by the schools on Monday.

Toronto Public Health is working with both school communities on further precautions to take now that they have positive cases, which includes contact tracing.

Karen Jurjevich, the principal of Branksome Hall, says the employee who contracted the virus at her school was teaching Grade 8 classes on Sept. 18 and symptoms started showing over the weekend.

The employee went to get tested and is now recovering in self-isolation, she says.

“We recognize how challenging this is for you and your child as we are only two weeks into the academic year. Our priority will always be the health and safety of your child and the broader community,” said Jurjevich.

Struan Robertson, the head of The York School, confirmed that two students who are siblings and attend the Junior School contracted the virus.

The two students were considered asymptomatic when they were last at the school on Sept. 17, Robertson says. Both siblings have been self-isolating at home since last week.

Toronto charts a course out of the COVID-19 pandemic with a recovery ‘roadmap’ — but without new powers or new money

Despite the pandemic highlighting a lack of power for Toronto to chart its own course — city officials spent a week trying to convince the province to — a new plan for recovery released Wednesday morning doesn’t recommend immediate changes to taxation or seeking new powers from the province.

Cities are at the front line of rebuilding after the pandemic, says the new report, designed as a “roadmap” to Toronto’s recovery from the pandemic. The result is a 270-page report with 83 recommendations on moving forward — from changing planning rules to encourage more affordable housing to making new bike lanes permanent.

But the country’s largest city faces an increasingly uncertain financial future, as is spelled out in a covering report to council from city manager Chris Murray that accompanies the roadmap.

With an economic downturn on a scale not seen since the Great Depression, , and an estimated $1.5-billion budget gap next year alone, the pandemic has only exposed existing problems and made them worse.

“Municipalities … were designed for another era — from our urban form, governance, financing and partners — everything we knew pre-pandemic has either been magnified or changed,” Murray says in his report.

“No longer can we make the significant contributions to so many programs and services that benefit not just Torontonians but the region as well, with limited abilities, resources, authorities or control over the things that matter most to our residents — equity, prosperity, health and wellbeing.”

Saad Rafi, a former provincial bureaucrat who is leading Toronto’s Recovery and Rebuild Strategy, and one of the authors of the roadmap, said they did consider raising taxes as an immediate step as part of their recommendations.

“Increasing taxes on those that are already in very, very challenging economic conditions was examined and thought not to be as effective,” said Rafi. He added that current provincial legislation governing what the city can and can’t do places “significant limitations” on how money can be collected.

Currently, the city’s most lucrative taxation powers are property taxes and the municipal land transfer tax. But under COVID-19, homeowners and businesses face their own financial challenges.

Instead, Rafi said, the report has focused on ways to create more spending ability for the city — which by law has to balance its budget — by pushing to increase funding from other levels of government.

On top of a projected $1.5 billion in losses and increased costs in 2021, the city is still facing a year-end shortfall in 2020 of $673.2 million, the reports point out — the largest gap in recent memory.

The reports also note that funding from the provincial and federal governments — outside of a pandemic — has not kept pace with inflation, dropping from $1,100 per person in 2010 to $830 in 2020.

That is largely explained by the and other social services on the city’s books, according to the reports.

Coun. Josh Matlow (Ward 12 Toronto-St. Paul’s) for Toronto as a way to increase the city’s ability to control its own destiny.

Several American cities, such as New York have , which gives them legal jurisdiction to manage their own affairs free from state interference.

Matlow said Wednesday it is an idea needed now more than ever.

“This pandemic has demonstrated very clearly how the toolbox that Toronto needs to provide services to residents and have the agility to address pressing public health priorities is different than Sault Ste. Marie and Wawa,” Matlow said. “And the tools that the province provides us need to reflect this reality.”

He said it matters to the city’s ability to address a housing crisis, ongoing opioid epidemic, community planning and future unexpected deficits.

Currently, the city’s powers largely exist under the provincial City of Toronto Act, which can be changed at any time by the province, as when unilaterally . That move and the city’s status as a “creature of the province” are subject of a .

“Cities throughout the United States don’t have to wait for their states or federal governments to be able to act on a number of basic priorities that Toronto has to go cap in hand to Queen’s Park to request,” said Matlow.

He added that the pandemic proved the ability to act quickly on our own may matter, pointing to .

“Time will tell the impact on public health that an entire week had, while we waited on the province to respond to our request to ban indoor dining,” he said, adding the mayor and council should be “empowered” to act on the city’s priorities in a timely way.

Murray, who is due to report to council on a charter and options for greater city autonomy, said Wednesday he expects that to be a part of the conversation going forward.

Dr. David Mowat, the province’s former chief medical officer of health who is heading the city’s public health strategy, said problems of autonomy existed before the pandemic and still need to be resolved.

He noted that immediately before the pandemic started, , including Toronto Public Health, and make changes to governance “which threatened to take away alignment between public health and the rest of city services.”

It also, he said, threatened to remove public health from having a say in policy, which he said is “essential” to address short-term goals of reducing infection, but also addressing social determinants of health.

He said it’s important the old structure for public health be allowed to continue unimpeded.

“I would like to see, after we have got through this acute phase, a reopening of that discussion and a reconsideration by the province of their prior plans for the future of public health infrastructure in this province.”

Murray, the city manager, said as of Wednesday the city had no guarantee from other levels of government they could promise funds by year’s end, but he remained hopeful that more money would be coming in phase two of the provincial Safe Restart plan that provided $668.6 million in the first phase.

Murray’s report says the upcoming budget debate will, regardless, require “difficult decisions.” Asked Wednesday, he said he could not rule out dramatic service cuts posed earlier in the pandemic.

His report also outlines that Toronto was in bad financial shape to begin with and the pandemic only “exacerbated the city’s structural financial challenges, especially the misalignment of revenues and responsibilities.”

“We will be taking a very drastic look at the 2021 budget if we don’t have the support that we need, ultimately, again from the federal and provincial government,” Murray said. “I think there is certainly great interest on our part in getting some clear indication as to what the art of the possible is for 2021.”

Jennifer Pagliaro is a Toronto-based reporter covering city hall and municipal politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Is your power out in Simcoe County?

For Alectra Utilities outages see this To report a power outage with Alectra, call 1-877-963-6900.

To find out up-to-date information about where power is out in Simcoe County and estimated restoration times for Hydro One power outages view their . To report a power outage to Hydro One call 1-800-434-1235.

For Orillia Power, view its

For InnPower (Innisfil) click on the

Collingwood residents can check Epcor’s list of . Contact Epcor at 705-445-1800 and press 7.

For Wasaga Distribution Inc., look at this list of scheduled and unscheduled or call 705-429-2517.

For Tay Township, see the Newmarket-Tay Power Distribution Ltd. or call 905-895-2309 and press 3.

To contact , call 705-526-9361.

Thousands of kids are waiting years for mental health care in Ontario. A new Toronto-based online program aims to fix that

A new program based in Toronto aims to rectify the years-long wait times for thousands of youth seeking access to mental health care across Canada.

Through an eight-week, intensive, online therapy platform, the New Start Digital Youth Intensive Outpatient Program is hoping to provide mental health care hundreds of youth aged 14 to 18 who are struggling with stress, anxiety and risky behaviour. The first group enrolled in the program began receiving care on Monday.

The program — the first of its kind in Canada — draws on existing approaches to virtual mental health care while also offering an education component to parents or guardians. It also uses a mobile application to appeal to its young participants.

The program is mainly funded by private donors, but there are hopes it will expand and reshape the future of youth mental health care in Canada.

“We’re able to access clients in remote areas who previously had barriers to accessing mental health, be it geographic barriers, financial barriers, and even emotional barriers,” said Toronto psychotherapist and National Director of Outpatient Services at EHN Canada Lanie Schachter-Snipper.

“Personally, I am very enthusiastic about online care,” she added.

Schachter-Snipper and Kalandra Roach, the executive director of New Start Foundation for Addiction and Mental Health — the organization behind the virtual program — said they were inspired to start an online platform for youth due to the notoriously long wait times to access mental health care in Ontario.

A estimates there are 200,000 kids with serious mental health issues in the province who have had no contact with services. The longest wait time to access care in the province is 2.5 years for children in York Region. In Toronto, the wait is almost two years.

The average wait for counselling and therapy is 67 days, CMHO’s report said. For intensive treatment, it’s 92 days. , Roach said.

“It’s pretty unacceptable in our opinion,” Roach said of the wait times. “We need a better system. The system is not working and we need to get kids the right, effective treatment as soon as possible.”

Roach said the New Start Foundation has a few goals in mind to reduce the waits for youth mental health care: one is to fund 500 youth from across the country to enrol in the digital program by 2021. The other is to build a new youth mental health care facility in Toronto.

Twenty youth across Ontario are participating in the inaugural version of the intensive outpatient program through a subsidized fee of $50 to ensure they stick with it, though it can be waived if money is a severe barrier.

The youth were screened by a clinical psychologist to assess their suitability, and lower-income participants from historically underserved communities were prioritized, Roach said.

The youth will participate in two-and-a-half hours of individual and group therapy sessions a week for eight weeks, Schachter-Snipper said. Meanwhile, parents or guardians will receive 16 hours of caregiver support over the course of the program.

“When mental health issues arise, it’s easier to have conversations about what’s going on, because the families or the caregivers have been provided psycho-education on mental health,” Schachter-Snipper explained.

Youth also have access to a mobile application in addition to the face-to-face online counselling they receive, which helps them work on the skills they’ve learned through therapy, Schachter-Snipper said.

The program is designed for young people who struggle with stress, anxiety or sadness, or may be engaging in risky behaviours to cope with their emotions, Roach said.

It teaches a combination of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy — a standard in mental health focused on challenging negative thoughts that alter behaviour, and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy — an approach that teaches people to accept their thoughts, encouraging mindfulness and discouraging guilt associated with negative emotions.

Another criteria for enrolment, Schachter-Snipper said, is that youth need to have access to technology to support the program’s online platform — a criteria she acknowledged is a barrier to many who need this type of treatment, despite the

“We’re really trying to reduce barriers,” she said, adding the foundation is working on building a tech library that can lend youth the hardware necessary to access this type of care.

“But at this point, [virtual care] is really the only barrier-free way to provide mental health services given the uncertain nature of the pandemic and everyone’s emphasis on being safe,” Schachter-Snipper said.

Both Roach and Schachter-Snipper said the nominal cost is key to ensuring more youth can access this type of mental health care — which is usually expensive since services by clinical psychologists and psychotherapists are not covered by OHIP.

The program has been mostly funded by private donors, said Roach, who has worked in Toronto’s health care fundraising sphere for the last seven years. The foundation hopes to secure funding from the province to continue programming and help fund its tech library.

Overall, Schachter-Snipper said the program is an example of how mental health care could live online even beyond the pandemic. It increases access for people who are otherwise physically far away from mental health professionals, or have other barriers to reaching mental health centres, she said.

“There’s a high degree of excitement and enthusiasm,” Schachter-Snipper said. “We know that we can just provide services to so many more people, and it works.”

Correction – Oct. 21, 2020: This article has been corrected to reflect that Lanie Schachter-Snipper is the National Director of Outpatient Services at EHN Canada.

Nadine Yousif is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering mental health. Her reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Follow her on Twitter:

Overstreet Media photography and video opens shop in Midland

Photographers Darryl and Rebekah Tremblay moved to Midland four years ago after they fell in love with the scenery and lifestyle.

In September, the couple opened Overstreet Media Productions, with an office, studio and editing shop at

“We are working with a number of realtors and we’d like to work with more. We are branching out and doing product photography and video work, which includes blogs,” said Rebekah.

Darryl, a licensed drone pilot, shoots aerial photography and video, while Rebekah does most of the editing. Both photographers shoot commercial work as well as interior design and architectural photography.

The couple were involved in a Georgian Bay General Hospital fundraiser by shooting COVID images inside the hospital as well as on the front steps.

OVERSTREET MEDIA

Type: Photography and video

Hours: Open by appointment only

Phone:

Website:


Sarah Valiquette-Thompson has resigned from Severn council

Severn councillor Sarah Valiquette-Thompson resigned from council Nov. 4. Valiquette-Thompson moved to Nova Scotia with her family earlier this year.

“On behalf of council, I extend sincere thanks to Sarah for her service to the community. It’s been a pleasure working alongside her these past couple of years. We wish the Valiquette-Thompson family all the best,” said Mayor Mike Burkett.

Severn Township has formally declared the Ward 5 seat vacant. When there’s a council vacancy, the municipality can hold a by-election or appoint a person who agrees to accept the position.

“Council considered the cost and timeline of both options and unanimously supported filling the position by appointment,” said township communications officer Lynn Racicot.

Interested individuals may apply by Dec. 4 at 4 p.m. Candidates must be eligible to vote in Severn to qualify for the position.

Council will interview candidates and select the new councillor Dec. 10 at 9 a.m. The successful candidate will be sworn in Dec. 16 at 9 a.m. Due to the pandemic, the meetings will be held electronically. The public can attend the meetings by phone or video.

Applications are available online at
 

Canada’s top doctors say the science of COVID-19 is clear — but how to act on it is up to politicians

OTTAWA – Canada’s top public health officers say medical and public health experts agree on the science and how to stem the growing COVID-19 tide, but it’s up to “political masters” to act on that information.

Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam avoided directly criticizing the Ontario government after the Star reported Premier Doug Ford’s government ignored its own expert advice on when to impose new pandemic restrictions.

But she said all medical officers of health have reached a consensus on the course of action that’s needed, issued clear advice, and are warning that Canadians must further limit their contacts.

Modelling shows that Canada could hit 10,000 daily new cases by the beginning of December if nothing changes, she warned.

“Fires are burning in so many different areas” outside the Atlantic bubble, Tam told reporters.

Deputy public health officer Dr. Howard Njoo warned the epidemic’s second wave could swamp the health-care system, given the current rate of hospitalizations and deaths.

He went further than Tam regarding Ontario’s actions, laying responsibility clearly at the feet of the premier and his ministers.

“Speaking for myself personally, as a public health physician and expert, our job really is to look at the evidence, the science, and do the analysis, the interpretation and then give our best advice and recommendations to our political masters,” Njoo said.

“At the end of the day, I think we recognize the elected officials are the ones that make the final decisions.”

Two hours later, Ford changed course and imposed tougher benchmarks than announced just this week for when new restrictions would be imposed in Ontario.

The Star reported this week the chief health protection officer at the province’s public health agency had urged the Ford government to set the threshold for action in the fourth colour-coded stage — known as red or “control” (one short of a lockdown) — four times lower than the government announced last week.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declined to express his view of the Ford government’s actions.

The federal government’s job is to support the provinces, he said, and Ottawa will do “whatever it takes” to support Canadians in the health crisis.

He said it is best if “we move quickly, firmly” to impose restrictions where warranted.

Tam’s warning that Canada might hit 10,000 daily cases within weeks “should be a wake-up call for everyone,” Trudeau said.

Ottawa has provided more than $21 billion directly to provinces since the spring for health, school and business measures to allow them to fight the pandemic.

Trudeau, who has consistently rejected declaring a national emergency, said the “optimal thing” would be for everyone to work together, to take the right measures.

“I think it’s important to remember that we’re in a federation where the federal government is not higher than or more important than provincial governments,” he said.

”We work as partners together. The provinces expressed a need for these supports and we delivered these supports … and we will continue to.”

Trudeau said questions about whether the provinces are spending the federal money on the right things are “quite appropriately to be asked by citizens in the provinces and organizations in the provinces of their provincial leaders.”

But Trudeau said he warned premiers on a conference call Thursday night that the federal government’s resources are “not infinite.”

He later clarified he meant resources like the provisions of personal protective equipment, people to do contact tracing, and Canadian Red Cross and Canadian Armed Forces personnel.

Still, the dichotomy between political views and the views of medical experts was on full view in the prime minister’s own news conference when Trudeau left open the possibility for family gatherings during the holidays.

“We need to hang in there a number more months,” Trudeau told reporters, adding what Canadians do in the “days to come will determine what we get to do” at Christmas.

Tam offered a dimmer view.

“Right now it’s not looking good,” she said.

“Given the projection that we have now, which is we could get to 10,000 cases by the beginning of December if we didn’t cut down on our contact and drastically flatten this curve now, I think it’s very unlikely that by the holiday season – I don’t think anyone’s advocating parties.

“This is not going to be a normal Christmas, but you can have a safe and a fun Christmas that includes social connection if you do it safely.”

Thanksgiving and Halloween celebrations offer a “cautionary tale” because despite warnings against holding parties, private get-togethers “may have increased acceleration in a number of areas in Canada,” Tam said.

“That cannot be done. Right now, that is not recommended.”

Again, Njoo was clearer: “I don’t foresee gatherings of large families, perhaps only those in the same household,” he said. “We may need to limit even more, have only some members of the family for a visit.

“Every Canadian has to perhaps look in the mirror and ask, ‘What can I do today?’”

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

Bruce Arthur: Crisis? Ontario’s COVID-19 response is just adequate enough to say that others are worse

“In fact, Ontario is not in a crisis right now. You want to speak about who is in crisis? Have you taken a look at Alberta, where they’re doubling up patients in intensive care units? We’re not doing that in Ontario.” — Christine Elliott, Ontario minister of health, this week.

You see, Ontario is not in a crisis, because Ontario is not jamming two people to a room in the ICU. Nor is Ontario rationing oxygen, unlike some provinces we could name. Yes, Alberta is currently being run by Jason Kenney’s pure, uncut conservatism: you have the personal freedom to infect yourself and others, and perhaps to get sick and die. Ontario has those instincts — the recent framework was the best example, — but for various reasons, this province plays closer to the middle. So Ontario, unlike Alberta is not in crisis.

By extension, York Region must not be in crisis. Friday to put York into lockdown, despite the fact that and test positivity than Toronto did when it was put into lockdown two weeks ago. York begged to avoid the province’s grey zone then, and again now: its local medical officer of health, Dr. Karim Kurji, signed the letter.

York still has hospital capacity, you see. Public health is not overwhelmed yet. Therefore, York is not in crisis. Maybe it gets locked down Monday, maybe not. Soon places like Waterloo, Hamilton, Windsor and Durham may not be in crisis, in a similar way.

What about schools? Schools are not in crisis. The minister of education, Stephen Lecce, keeps telling us that 99.9 per cent of children in school are COVID-free. Of course, then came asymptomatic testing at Thorncliffe Public School in East York, driven by Michael Garron Hospital and supported by the province. It found , which the province and even Toronto Public Health downplayed given the prevalence of in the neighbourhood.

Then three teachers said they were walking off the job, and now the school is closed. The City of Toronto for schools and daycares: runny noses will require a COVID test again to return to school; the siblings of sick kids will have to be kept home, too.

Those conditions had been changed at the beginning of October, when the province started trying to curb testing everywhere it could because the backlog was crippling the system, and schools were part of that. The province had back in the spring in time for September, as part of Ontario’s puzzling failure until the fall was already underway.

More schools will be tested, now: In East York, Scarborough, North York, York Region. We are about to find out whether we have been missing cases in schools for two months, and what that means. Maybe it means closing schools.

But for now, schools are not in crisis.

The premier was not available to weigh in Friday because the province has also struck a vaccine distribution task force, which includes nobody from public health, or geriatric medicine — is long-term care, where 124 people have died in the last two weeks and 310 since Halloween, in crisis? — or family medicine, or nursing, but does include former Toronto police chief Mark Saunders, for some reason. Still, a task force is important.

“I’m going to work my hardest to ensure we have a data-driven and equitable approach to vaccination,” says Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Toronto, who is on the task force. “We need to hear voices from disproportionately impacted communities, including Indigenous, South Asian, Black and impoverished communities. Ultimately, for any vaccine program to be a success we need meaningful community engagement, and stellar communication that is transparent and honest.”

All that, at an Ontario-wide level, would be a commendable first. Meanwhile, as reported by the Star’s Jennifer Yang and Kate Allen, Ontario’s poorest, most vulnerable, most racialized people are , just as they .

And still, the province declines to extend paid sick leave or reintroduce an eviction ban. Ontario’s eviction ban , as the second wave was already underway. Is that a crisis?

And then there are the hospitals. This is a hyperlocalized disease, but the system is straining as patients are shuttled like it’s a shell game, and staff are verging on burnout and shortages.

“(The hospital system is) transferring ICU patients every day for a bed, but now we’re also transferring ward patients, and this is new,” says Dr. Michael Warner, the head of critical care at Michael Garron Hospital. “I think public health and political decisions to some degree have been made based on the presumption that the health-care system would be there at the end of the day as the ultimate safety net. And that we could accept some mistakes or some reactive responses because the health-care system would be there, as it has been.

“But as we’ve been told all along, hospitalizations are lagging indicators, and those lagging indicators are trying to scream that things are not OK. And unless we provide support for people, paid sick days, surveillance testing in schools, which should be mandatory in high-risk areas, and (isolation), a vaccine will not be here in time to bridge that gap.”

Ontario was at 153 people in the ICU a week ago, and it was 207 Thursday. Surgeries are being cancelled, here and there. The modelling table pegged 400 in the ICU as the number at which point hospital services start to stop functioning. We’re not there yet, thankfully.

So maybe Ontario is not in crisis, if you define crisis as beds jammed together in the ICU, hallway ventilation, not enough oxygen to go around. It’s a hell of a way to define a crisis, but that’s apparently where we’re at.

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