Month: September 2021

Long-lost First World War medal returns to Midland from Nova Scotia

A First World War medal, discovered in the back of a 1950s-era Chevrolet in Halfway River, Nova Scotia, has been successfully returned to a family in Midland.

The 1914-18 service medal, belonging to Private Nelson Hampden Bell, was presented to Jeff Bell — his closest living relative — in Midland on Nov. 2. 

“This is one of those lost and found stories that we are delighted to say has a happy ending,” said Daniel Travers, Sgt-at-Arms at the Midland Legion.

In September, Travers received an email from Keith Odlin, the service officer and museum curator at Legion Branch 45 in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia, notifying him of the medal. 

Charles Davison, a farmer in Halfway River, discovered the medal in the back of an old Chevrolet truck he was restoring when he removed the rear seats. Davison contacted the Parrsboro Legion for assistance in tracking down its rightful owner.

All First World War medals are inscribed with the names of the soldiers receiving them. Odlin was able to see that the medal belonged to infantryman Private N.H. Bell. He searched online records and discovered that Bell’s next of kin, Mary Bell, had a Midland P.O. box listed as her address.

Odlin contacted Travers, who enlisted the help of Legion volunteer Rob Thorpe, and Huronia Museum curator Genevieve Carter, to help track down Bell’s closest living relative.

Through research, they discovered that Bell was a Midland resident during the war and that he is currently buried at Lakeview Cemetery. Thorpe used burial records from the cemetery to track down the name of the individual who paid for the burial, which led them to Bell’s sister. Carter then sifted through extensive genealogy records to find Bell’s closest living relative — Jeff Bell.

Once they knew who the medal belonged to, Odlin mailed the medal from Parrsboro to Midland.

“This was an exciting collaboration between both legion branches and the Huronia Museum,” said Travers. “With hundreds of thousands of these medals presented to Canadian soldiers during and after the war, finding its rightful owner was, by no means, certain. We are so pleased that the medal is where it rightfully belongs.”

Toronto Public Health aims to resume full contact tracing of COVID-19 cases as indoor dining, gym visits set to restart

With Torontonians poised to resume mingling in reopened bars, restaurants and gyms, public health officials are returning to full tracing of all contacts of everyone infected with in the city.

Dr. Eileen de Villa, the city’s public health chief, told reporters Wednesday the “scaling up” of efforts to identify everyone with the virus, and get them to isolate, is vital as the provincial order halting indoor dining and gym visits expires Nov. 14.

The order expires Nov. 7 for the other hot spots, Peel and York regions and Ottawa. Facing rising daily infection numbers that hit a record 427 on Tuesday, Toronto asked Premier Doug Ford’s government before reopening.

Lifting restrictions will increase mingling and infections, de Villa said, and her goal is to have as many safeguards as possible to prevent a disastrous increase in spread.

“We are working toward resuming full contact tracing in our city,” among other measures, de Villa said, including adding 200 case management and contact staff to the current 700, seeking help from three Toronto hospitals and employing tech tools such as robocalls and text messaging.

Facing a dramatic surge in new infections in early October, Toronto Public Health to aim its staff who interview infected people to discover who they exposed only at high-risk settings such as schools and seniors homes.

But while the city scales up its response, de Villa said the Ontario government must also improve its efforts to protect the residents of Toronto, which on Wednesday saw new daily infections , but also recorded 11 new COVID-19 deaths — the most since June.

“Accessible and available testing needs to be scaled up,” de Villa said. COVID-19 testing, a provincial responsibility, was completed for 28,567 people Tuesday, down from summer levels when people with no symptoms could get tested.

Also, “sick-day provisions should be enacted by the province so that people don’t have to choose between staying home or going to work when they’re sick,” said de Villa.

Mayor John Tory said the city will work with de Villa to ensure Toronto is ready to reopen safely without an infection spike that could trigger a new lockdown.

“We can take the steps, with the resources we will apply as a city and Toronto Public Health, to be ready to open safely and to stay open safely,” Tory told reporters. “I’m confident we can do that — that’s what we have to do.”

De Villa said she won’t hesitate to act if virus indicators suggest that reopening could send COVID-19 spreading out of control.

“If the data tells us we need to do something differently, that we need more measures or we need more time … I will not hesitate to tell the people of Toronto or to ask for whatever is necessary in order to keep the people of Toronto as safe as possible,” she said.

Toronto was ordered into a modified Stage 2 on Oct. 10, during a period of rapid case increases.

Gyms were closed and a ban on indoor dining reinstated, for a period of 28 days.

On Tuesday, the province introduced new guidelines for implementing such restrictions, leading epidemiologists to express concern that the new thresholds are too high.

Under the province’s new guidelines, before ordering restrictions like the ones currently in force in Toronto, the province will look for: a weekly incidence rate higher than 100 infections per 100,000 residents; percent positivity greater than 10; a reproductive rate greater than 1.2; repeated outbreaks in multiple settings, and a health-care system at risk of becoming overwhelmed by the growing number of cases.

Not all of the thresholds need to be met at the same time.

Provincial officials have said that while the guidelines are given a specific weighting, the decision to move any public health unit into a particular level is ultimately based on subjective recommendations made to cabinet by the province’s chief medical officer of health, in consultation with local medical officers of health.

Some of the targets set by the province are so high they’ve never been met in Toronto, even on the worst days of the pandemic.

According to a Star analysis of public health data Wednesday, Toronto is currently reporting an average of about 85 cases per 100,000 residents per week; test positivity of 4.6 per cent; and an effective reproductive number of approximately 1.

Toronto only reported test positivity above 10 per cent for three weeks in March and April, and has never again come near that level. The city’s reproductive number has averaged more than 1.2 only twice — in the early period of rapid exponential growth in the spring, and during a long stretch of steady growth in late summer.

The city has never come close to passing 100 weekly cases per 100,000 residents — that number peaked at 55 in May.

Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious disease specialist at Toronto General Hospital, said he supports the province’s decision to provide clear metrics.

“People need to know what to expect — especially business owners,” said Bogoch. “Where I think it needs recalibration is on some of the metrics.”

Bogoch said Toronto would not be in a modified Stage 2 under the new guidelines. He said the high thresholds set by the province would allow transmission to grow to the point where it would become difficult to rein in again.

“Things will not get better with this as it stands now, and it has the potential to get worse.”

David Rider is the Star’s City Hall bureau chief and a reporter covering city hall and municipal politics. Follow him on Twitter:

Ed Tubb is an assignment editor and a contributor focused on crime and justice for the Star. He is based in Toronto. Follow him on Twitter:

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

What’s the hold up with COVID-19 rapid tests in Canada?

Despite the name, getting easy access to rapid tests for COVID-19 in Canada is moving at a glacial pace.

While experts believe rapid testing may be one of the many tactics to help get under control, so far in Canada they are being used in limited ways, still being tested or just being stockpiled for potential future use.

As well, a rapid test for home use has for use in Canada.

The big knock on rapid tests is that they are not as accurate as the gold standard of lab-based tests, but as the French philosopher Voltaire may agree, are we letting the perfect become the enemy of the good?

is a Star reporter who has been covering rapid tests and he joins This Matters to explain the slow hand they have been dealt across the country.

Listen to this episode and more at or subscribe at , , or wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts.

Donald Trump may be leaving, but the flames he fanned burn ever brighter

For almost as long as the real-world horror show of 2020 has been playing out in the United States, President Donald Trump has been promising that his country is “turning the corner.”

And finally, entering the last month of the year, the bend in the road is actually visible on the horizon: multiple COVID vaccines are on the way; a new president has won the election; both of those changes raise the hope for sustained economic recovery.

Many Americans have been breathing a deep sigh of relief at the prospect of a smoother and less dangerous road ahead. Canadians who have been anxious that the raging flames of their neighbour’s dumpster fire might cross the property line and burn their own house down may well be ready to relax.

But like a Toronto Maple Leafs fan celebrating a three-goal lead in a playoff elimination game, the justified optimism, upon quick reflection, gives way to the realization that the hardest part may still lie ahead. Everyone can see there is light at the end of the tunnel — bright light, yes — but the road to reach it appears bumpier and more dangerous than the horrifying path already travelled.

The analogies may seem trite given the real-life tragedy that’s unfolding. As Canadians know all too well in an era of soaring caseloads and renewed lockdowns, COVID isn’t done with us yet. And too many Americans are learning that in the hardest way. this week are four times higher than they were during the previous devastating peak of the summer. Over 100,000 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID, more than 20,000 in ICU units. Every state in the country is seeing increasing COVID deaths. On Thursday alone, 2,857 Americans died from it: a record high that is within 150 deaths of the number who perished on Sept. 11, 2001. In the weeks ahead, Americans might now expect a 9/11-scale loss of life every single day from the coronavirus.

President-elect Joe Biden has been working to communicate this horror and danger to the public: late last month he urged people (apparently with limited success) to stay isolated for the Thanksgiving holiday, on Thursday he proposed a voluntary mask mandate for the whole country for the first 100 days of his administration and confirmed he was keeping on Dr. Anthony Fauci in an elevated role.

But Biden is not president yet: the inauguration is not until Jan. 20. In the meantime, the man he’ll be replacing remains busy, apparently ignoring COVID, and working to sabotage Biden’s chances of success as president. Most famously by rejecting the election results and continuing to baselessly attack the integrity of the election, making the of his sizable number of supporters.

But that isn’t all of it: Trump has been who he sees as disloyal to him, to permanent administration staff jobs, , as many death-row inmates as possible, international and boxing in and to cement his own priorities, furiously , rolling back — just for starters.

A majority of Americans indicated in the election they were done with Trump, but he’s showing vividly that he isn’t done with them. In his final month and a half in office, he’s likely not just to continue loudly objecting to Biden’s victory, but doing as much as he can to make Biden’s presidency difficult.

Nowhere is this more evident than confronting the ongoing economic crisis that has accompanied the COVID pandemic’s devastation. Trump’s treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin recently placed more than $450 million in unspent COVID emergency lending dollars in an account that would make it inaccessible to Biden’s administration without further congressional authorization. It’s a move Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown said was an attempt to “” ahead of Biden’s inauguration.

That comes as the outgoing Congress has been deadlocked on further economic relief measures, and as existing relief packages are set to dry up. Some members of Congress (and Trump) have pointed to upticks in job numbers though the last half of the year and decent stock market index prices as signs the economy continues to recover. But jobs never recovered to anywhere close to their pre-pandemic heights, and the most recent report shows the recovery stalling. With COVID surging to record highs, the economy is set to suffer further: as economist Daniel Zhao Friday, “Ultimately, the virus is in the driver’s seat. The virus is what determines the trajectory of the recovery.” Meanwhile, roughly 12 million people are set to see their unemployment benefits expire on the day after Christmas.

By Thursday, crafted by a bipartisan group of rank-and-file members of Congress (one scaled back dramatically from earlier Democratic proposals) appeared to have enough support to pass before a Dec. 11 deadline.

Friday, Democratic House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi with vaccines on the way and Biden set to take over as president, said she was optimistic about “a new dynamic” that would “make all the difference in the world.” She said the compromise to keep the economy going — to put food on tables and pay bills for desperate people — appeared to her and to Biden as “at best, just a start.” But it was, she said, “a path forward” to get the country to a vaccine and a new president.

There is a light visible at the end of the tunnel. But finding a path to get to it without drastically more suffering and conflict may be as hard for Americans as anything that’s come before.

Edward Keenan is the Star’s Washington Bureau chief. He covers U.S. politics and current affairs. Reach him via email:

Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis offers us a study in schadenfreude: Why ‘the misfortune of others tastes like honey’

As the bombshell news of U.S. President diagnosis flooded the internet Friday morning, commentators could barely contain themselves.

Some pundits, unabashed in their giddiness, said Trump deserved “zero sympathy” after downplaying the severity of the pandemic for months and even mocking people for wearing masks.

“Karmic retribution,” they scoffed, as such hashtags as #trumphascovidparty surfaced.

Others took a more measured tone, saying while they abhorred the president’s handling of coronavirus, it was uncouth to delight over such potentially grave matters. “I don’t wish ill on anyone” was a common refrain.

What to make of the morally ambiguous outpouring — this schadenfreude?

Alice MacLachlan, a philosophy professor at York University, suggested there’s a line to be walked when it comes to schadenfreude — a term that is an amalgam of the German ‘schaden,’ meaning “harm,” and ‘freude,’ meaning “joy.”

“In general, I’m not entirely opposed to schadenfreude. I think it has its moments. I think it can relieve despair and misery. It can also be a collective or group bonding exercise,” she said.

“At this time, though, I am more worried about it than I would be generally. As we find ourselves isolated because of the pandemic and as we find ourselves increasingly politically divided … and particularly as one of the most powerful democracies in the world feels especially fragile in the lead-up to the election, there’s a sense in which participation in any collective emotion happening publicly online is always a little bit out of control. And we don’t have a good sense of the consequences.”

Her upshot?

“When it comes to the temptations of schadenfreude, we don’t want to be saints, but we should be restrained sinners.”

Alberta writer Omar Mouallem was among those on Twitter on Friday who didn’t hold back in sharing his reaction to Trump’s diagnosis.

“In just six months, Trump is responsible for killing more Americans than Osama bin Laden, whose death was long wished and celebrated. So spare us your disapproving lectures,” he wrote. “We don’t keep mass murderers in our thoughts.”

On the other hand, Dr. Isaac Bogoch, a University of Toronto infectious disease specialist, urged restraint.

“I don’t wish ill on anyone and hope Donald & Melania Trump have a speedy recovery from #COVID19 — regardless of my ideological differences,” he tweeted. “This is a terrible infection and nobody deserves to get this.”

Scouring through the available research, there appears to be little consensus about whether feelings of malicious joy are ultimately good for us or not as a society.

research suggests there could be multiple triggers. One school of thought says the emotion is derived from feelings of envy — when someone we envy gets knocked down it makes us feel better inside.

Another theory suggests that schadenfreude is linked to “deservingness” — the feeling that someone dealt a misfortune had it coming to them.

A third theory suggests schadenfreude is tied to intergroup-conflict and feelings of rivalry, such as during a sporting or political competition.

For most people, such feelings are temporary and will give way to feelings of empathy, the researchers have found. But for others, schadenfreude may be closely linked to other “dark” personality traits — namely sadism, narcissism and psychopathy.

In her 2018 book , Tiffany Watt Smith, a cultural historian in London, offers a less bleak take on the phenomenon. She notes that feelings of schadenfreude — which she describes as “these confusing bursts of pleasure, swirled through with shame” — happen more often than we think.

Consider the delight we feel over the skier who faceplants in the snow, the politician who accidentally tweets an indecent picture, or the work colleague who fails to get a promotion.

Schadenfreude is not particular to Western culture either, she notes. “The Japanese have a saying: ‘The misfortune of others tastes like honey.’”

While philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer condemned schadenfreude as “an infallible sign of a thoroughly bad heart,” Smith argues the opposite.

“Schadenfreude may appear anti-social. Yet it is a feature of many of our most cherished communal rituals, from sports to gossip. It may seem misanthropic, yet it is enmeshed in so much of what is distinctly human about how we live: the instinct for justice and fairness; a need for hierarchies and the quest for status within them; the desire to belong to and protect the groups that keep us safe. It may seem superior and demeaning, yet it also speaks of our need to appreciate the absurdity of our attempts to appear in control in a world forever slipping out of our grasp,” she writes.

“It might seem isolating and divisive, but it testifies to our need to not feel alone in our disappointments, but to seek the consolations of being part of a community of the failed.”

Before news broke late Friday that Trump was being sent to hospital to undergo tests, MacLachlan said she suspected that many people who had earlier expressed glee over Trump’s diagnosis would likely “change their tune” if it turned life-threatening.

MacLachlan says a conversation she had Friday morning with her seven-year-old daughter, who is just starting to become aware of politics, reminded her she should probably temper her own reaction.

“When I told her he had coronavirus, she said, ‘Oh, I hope it’s a learning experience for him. I hope it makes him think about people who don’t have money for hospitals or who can’t go home when they’re sick and that it makes him better.’”

Personally, MacLachlan thinks the chances of such an outcome are slim, but it did give her pause.

“There’s this chance of misfortune as moral progress.”

But Mouallem stood by his provocative tweet, citing to the Star a Cornell University study that recently identified Trump as a superspreader of coronavirus misinformation.

“This is a matter of justice. When a mass murderer is convicted and sentenced, we don’t call that schadenfreude, we call that justice. That’s how I see this. … He is responsible for countless numbers of people who have died, could die or at the very least will suffer injuries or symptoms for who knows how long. Spare me from performing this politeness for a man who shows none to any human being,” he said.

“Why should I give thoughts and prayers to someone like that?”

Douglas Quan is a Vancouver-based reporter for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

Rosie DiManno: Donald Trump, the liar-in-chief, unmasked: No one can take comfort from his assurances now

Deus ex machina.

Literally: god from the machine.

An unexpected event saving a seemingly hopeless situation. For the Greeks who coined it, in a theatrical context, a contrived plot twist.

President , by testing positive for — the global plague that he mocked, lied through his teeth to diminish, issued absurdist advice to counteract (ingesting bleach) — has not saved himself from the hopelessness of his re-election chances, as projected by every poll out there. But the republic may have been saved, at least temporarily, from the exhausting madness of his berserk election campaign.

America was still trying to recover from Tuesday’s jaw-dropping debate between Trump and Democratic nominee — essentially a primal scream from the president, every facet of his unfitness for office on full public display — when the country learned both Trump and his wife, Melania, had tested positive and were entering isolation in the White House.

Indeed, the president had ridiculed his rival for following the government’s own protocols for limiting infection, beating that nag again in the debate. “I don’t wear masks like him. Every time you see him, he’s got a mask. He could be speaking 200 feet from him, and he shows up with the biggest mask I’ve ever seen.’’

Then Trump attended fundraisers in Minneapolis and New Jersey, the latter apparently after his adviser and close confidante, Hope Hicks, had already tested positive for the coronavirus. Hicks was part of the entourage that had travelled to the Cleveland debate with the president, aboard Air Force One. Trump’s adult children and senior aides were also on that flight — none of them wearing masks or physically distancing. If Bloomberg hadn’t broken the news about Hicks on Thursday, would the White House have tried to sit on that information, prevent it from getting out?

The state of the president’s health is not a private issue.

So now Trump is the same boat as 7.31 million Americans who’ve contracted COVID-19, an unknown number likely because they were following their president’s indefensible lead when he could have and should have promoted safety measures. Upwards of 208,000 have died.

It’s unclear when Trump contracted the virus. It usually presents within five to 10 days after exposure. So maybe not Hicks; maybe the rally held at the White House lawn last Saturday, 200 people present for Trump’s announcement of his Supreme Court pick, Amy Coney Barrett. Or the rally he attended that night at Harrisburg International Airport in Middletown, Pa. Either occasion may turn out to be a super-spreader.

Every single person who was in close proximity with Trump needs to self-isolate, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Republican Sen. Mike Lee, who’s on the Senate judicial committee, was at the White House lawn event, unmasked. Lee revealed Friday that he’d tested positive. That could throw a wrench into advancing Barrett’s nomination from the judicial panel to the full Senate for a confirmation vote. Pshaw, countered McConnell: full speed ahead.

The president is 74 years old and, at 244 pounds, officially obese. Both are factors placing him at high risk for the worst portents of the disease, although the White House said Friday that Trump was experiencing only mild symptoms. “He continues to be, not only in good spirits, but very energetic,’’ White House chief of staff Mark Meadows told reporters.

But, as we now know about COVID-19, symptoms are usually mild in the first few days after infection, even in cases that subsequently rise to the level of requiring ventilation. By late afternoon, there were reports Trump had a fever and was receiving experimental therapies. He was taken by helicopter to the Walter Reed military hospital Friday evening, and tweeted a short video saying he thinks he’s doing well.

Tell me one good reason why anybody should believe anything coming out of this White House, anyway.

For nearly four years, the administration has obfuscated, prevaricated, falsified and outright deceived the country, on matters large and matters picayune. The Washington Post fact-checker blog had tracked 20,000 lies that came out of Trump’s mouth, as of mid-July. Even his supporters concede Trump is a bald-faced liar. An ABC-IPSOS poll last month showed seven in 10 Americans (69 per cent) didn’t trust the president on the pandemic specifically.

He may be the liar-in-chief but that duplicity cascades through his administration. Nobody can take any comfort from their assurances now, especially given the opaque bulletins provided about the president’s condition. They have no history of giving straight answers.

Which leaves the election campaign — the , only a month away — in utter chaos. All of Trump’s scheduled events for the next week have been postponed or will, according to the White House, be conducted virtually.

It Trump’s condition deteriorates, that could trigger the Twenty-Fifth Amendment, his powers transferred to Vice-President Mike Pence, who said Friday that he has tested negative. But of course that doesn’t mean he might not test positive tomorrow or the next day, given the COVID-19 incubation period.

This campaign, from the Trump camp, has been all about sidestepping the pandemic. Earlier this week, he maintained happy days again were “just around the corner,’’ the coronavirus crisis almost laid to rest. Wasn’t true then, certainly isn’t true now, probably won’t be true for months and months to come. The only consolation is that Trump, recovered or convalescing or seriously ailing — as so many victims who’ve “recovered’’ complain about ongoing fatigue and aches and breathing issues — will, fingers crossed, not be occupying the White House for much longer.

The country was already bracing for potential mayhem on Nov. 3, in no small part because Trump has steadily undermined the legitimacy of the election, casting thoroughly discounted imputations against mail-in ballots. He hasn’t explicitly agreed to accept the results; indeed, tacitly invoking an army of brownshirts to stand by. Such is the spectre of violence hanging over the election that the Justice Department is planning to station officials in a command centre at FBI headquarters to co-ordinate a federal response to disturbances that may arise across the country.

Trump has bickered endlessly and publicly with his own health experts, with the scientists, over the seriousness of and treatment for the pandemic. He’s shown reckless and wanton disregard for the lives of Americans. Now here he is, a symbol of his own folly, surrounded by the erosion of truth and facts.

The White House has provided a case study in how not to handle a highly contagious illness in the workplace. They didn’t even inform the Biden camp about Trump’s positive result. Trump has rejected the clear risk of COVID-19 from the start, doubling down on its harmlessness to most people, even as his generic fabrications and sophistries — on everything — reached breakneck speed.

It was patently clear from Trump’s conduct during the debate — the childish insults, the overwrought bullying — that he knows he’s headed for defeat on Nov. 3 and that the balance of his campaign would be scorched-earth bedlam.

There is one way out of this mess. Trump can withdraw. Deus ex machina.

There’s no precedent for it but there was no precedent for a president of such buffoonery and malice either. It would be a gracious retreat.

But what knows Donald Trump about grace and integrity and honour?

Proud Boy that he is.

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

We can’t let our guard down on COVID, warns Midland mayor

Thanksgiving is a time to give thanks for what we have. The prime minister, the premier and medical advisers are asking us to limit our gatherings to no more than 10 people indoors.

After all, smaller is safer. A virtual Thanksgiving dinner is one alternative, with less cleanup for you.

As infection rates rise and a second wave looms, remember that we are all in this together, and together we will stop the spread of COVID.

Simple things will keep us safe: Wash your hands frequently, keep a social distance, and wear a mask! Now is not the time to let our guard down.

Sept. 14 saw the municipal office fully reopen to the public. Except for a one-hour daily cleaning, between 1 and 2 p.m., we are open, but we are advising that you book appointments for in-depth services, such as planning, building services, marriage licences and commissioning of documents.

Council voted on Sept. 16 to eliminate the ward system in favour of an at-large vote for your council representation starting in 2022. This means that you can vote for all nine council seats. Councillors will no longer represent specific wards — they will represent the entire town.

A public meeting is scheduled for Oct. 21 to hear from you on this matter, prior to council considering the proposed bylaw.

Remember, the extension for COVID-19 relief on property tax and utility bills ends Oct. 31. The relief measures waiving budgeted penalty/interest also ends. Rent relief continues for tenants at the NSSRC, who are negatively impacted under the provincial emergency closures.

hosts our Customer Experience Survey, your chance to provide feedback. Our Budget 2021 Survey is also online.

I was reminded recently of the remarkable generosity of the Georgian Bay Gals. They have gifted almost $138,000 to Georgian Bay General Hospital, Hospice Huronia, Georgian Bay Cancer Support Center and Huronia Transition House.

The Guesthouse Shelter and Community Hub are the focus of their Oct. 19 gathering. For more, visit .

Stewart Strathearn is mayor of Midland.

Ontario Grade 12 students seeking answers about graduation are facing a test of nerves

Tristan John “Tjay” Jandles knew that applying to university during a global pandemic would likely be mired in confusion. But for the soon-to-be graduate, the most frustrating thing has been getting timely answers to his questions.

“Being a Grade 12 student in 2020 comes with this feeling of uncertainty,” said Jandles, 17, a student at Huron Heights Secondary School in Kitchener.

When he started school in September, his priority was diving into university and financial-aid applications. The dual citizen is interested in post-secondary schools in Canada and the U.S.

Jandles said he hit a snag when trying to apply for the Ontario Student Assistance Program this year. He called OSAP, but no one called back, and when he contacted his guidance counsellors for help, they said they could help him … next month. He eventually reached someone at an American university who could help. But it meant he had to fill in the financial aid form on paper and send it to OSAP via snail mail.

“It seems the priority is everywhere but the 2020 to 2021 students.”

With forcing school boards to adjust , Ontario’s Grade 12 students are facing a graduating year like no other. Virtual school versus in-person, quadmester versus semestered, exams or no exams, courses with grades vs. pass/fail. As students are looking to line up their post-secondary education, the current school year keeps throwing them curveballs.

Some students are concerned they won’t have requisite classes in time for the application deadlines. Others are concerned that without extracurriculars and sports, they won’t stand out. Some students, especially those online, say it’s been difficult to connect to get timely advice.

Amalia Acharya, a 17-year-old virtual student, was frustrated a few weeks ago, when she couldn’t find the criteria for a certain scholarship online. When she emailed the guidance counsellor at her former school, she didn’t hear back for a week.

“It was pretty stressful,” she said, noting her mom is a guidance counsellor who eventually intervened to help.

Ryan Bird of the Toronto District School Board says schools will be providing students information about the application process. For students learning online, the TDSB Virtual Secondary School will be responsible for connecting students with the university and college applicaton centres, Ontario Universities’ Application Centre and the Ontario College Application Service.

Bird says the board, like most others, has been keeping students up to date with the constantly changing requirements for students to graduate, and how their final year of high school will be assessed.

Last week, the province announced that it would give school boards , allowing them to use exam days for in-class instructional time. They said boards could choose other options for final evaluations that are worth up to 30 per cent of students’ final grades.

The TDSB said it will be cancelling exams and “final marks will be based on coursework and in-class end of quadmester assessment of learning.”

The province has also revised the requirement for 40 hours of community service to graduate, decreasing it to 20 hours and adding flexibility in earning hours, such as by helping siblings at home, or even putting hours of paid employment toward the community service hours.

Sophie Pellar, a Grade 12 student at Ursula Franklin Academy in Toronto, said it’s been tough just to keep up with all the changes — which keep coming.

“We don’t even know if we’ll have school in two weeks!” she said. “No one knows what’s going on. We can’t turn to our guidance counsellors or our teachers because they’re just as confused as we are.”

Richard Long, a math teacher and department head at Bayside Secondary School near Belleville, says this year’s graduating students have it a lot harder than in the pre-COVID years.

Because of the way classes are structured this year, into quadmesters or octomesters, rather than typical semesters, high school students are now immersed in one or two subjects at a time, sometimes for several hours a day.

Tutorials at lunch are a thing of the past. So is casually dropping by a teacher’s office to ask a question. Even collaborating with friends has become more complicated because of social distancing. To ease their path, Long said, he’s giving his students various opportunities to excel. If they don’t do well on one test or assignment, they know they’ll have other chances.

“It’s a difficult year for these kids,” he said. “It’s cognitive overload. Some have tremendous anxiety, and with increased anxiety it’s been difficult to learn. Teachers are sensitive to that.”

Universities also understand the circumstances, says Heather Lane, executive director at the Ontario Universities’ Application Centre, which processes undergraduate and professional applications for admission to Ontario’s universities.

“Universities are very well aware of what is going in schools,” said Lane. “And we have the experience of last spring around some of the challenges and institutions having to make pivots or offer extensions based on what was happening,” she said.

Lane says despite the unconventional year, the university deadline applications have not changed: applications are still due Jan. 15, universities will aim to have offers out to students by the end of May, and students can start accepting offers by June 1.

“Those dates will likely not change, because there is no impact on what’s happening with COVID on those,” said Lane. “The challenge becomes around deadline dates that have to do with the school and school boards submitting grades to OUAC to be passed on to the universities,” she said.

Lane said that last year, when schools shut down in March, “we had to have a lot of conversations with the Ministry of Education and our university partners around grades, deadlines, and there were some extensions for schools to get grades in … and we and the universities did our best to be as flexible as possible.”

She said the challenge this year is that some students are in a quadmester program — where the school year is divided into four blocks and take two subjects at a time — and “in some cases, some students may have not even started a required course at the time they’re making a decision,” she said.

“Each university will have to determine how they will handle that … but I suspect, as they were last year, they will work to be flexible,” she said, including making conditional offers until the courses are completed.

Lane said OUAC is also in the process of sending out registration PINs to students, some may be getting them in the mail directly, while others may be getting them from their school board.

Lane said that for specific program requirements, students should contact the university, or talk to their guidance counsellors. But if they have questions around the application process, they can ask the OUAC.

“York University understands the stress prospective students are under due to the difficulty resulting from the global pandemic,” said Yanni Dagonas, the school’s deputy spokesperson.

“When a student is unable to obtain their final exam results or achieve a pre-requisite due to extenuating circumstances caused by the global pandemic, we encourage them to contact our admissions office so we can provide appropriate guidance,” he said. “Our goal is always to work with prospective students to find a solution for them to pursue their post-secondary goals.”

Others universities like Western have set up a COVID-19 info page to give students more details on how to apply.

The Ministry of Colleges and Universities says it “is engaged in ongoing communication with the Ontario University Application Centre (OUAC) to discuss how to continue to support students as they apply to postsecondary education programs, considering the unique circumstances of this school year.”

They said the Ontario Student Assistance Program application for an upcoming school year was launched in May, and the deadline and eligibility criteria have not changed for the 2020-21 school year.

With files from Kristin Rushowy

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

Michele Henry is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star, writing health and education stories. Follow her on Twitter:

Today’s coronavirus news: Ontario reporting 821 cases, 3 more deaths; 1 in 4 Canadians say mental health is worse now

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

7:51 p.m. Forty-nine active COVID-19 cases have been linked to a wedding in Calgary earlier this month, as Alberta’s top doctor warned the province is in the “danger zone.”

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, chief medical health officer, said 63 people attended the celebration, which was partly indoors.

“I think it’s really important to make sure that we’re not singling this particular event out as an outlier, because it’s simply an example of a kind of activity that we know causes spread if an infectious person shows up,” she said during Tuesday’s COVID-19 media briefing.

She said a common thread between the wedding outbreak and other recent ones is that one or two protective measures — whether that be hand sanitizer, masks or physical distancing — likely slipped.

“The people that were involved did nothing intentionally wrong,” said Hinshaw. “They were doing their best to follow guidance and it just reinforces that everyone that attends one of these events needs to think about all those layers of protection.”

Under provincial COVID-19 restrictions, a maximum of 100 people can attend outdoor and indoor seated events, such as wedding ceremonies, funeral services, movie theatres, indoor arts and culture performances.

Alberta reported 323 new COVID-19 cases over the past day and one additional death, bringing the province’s total fatalities to 293.

There are 116 people in hospital, including 16 in intensive care.

The Alberta government has said its health-care system can manage as long as no more than half of its intensive care beds dedicated to COVID-19 patients are full and its daily compounded hospitalization rate stays below five per cent.

Hinshaw said 23 per cent of its COVID-19 ICU beds are being used and that its daily compounded hospitalization rate is 3.1 per cent.

“I would say we’re in a danger zone where the coming weeks will really tell that story about whether we are able collectively to bend that curve downwards,” she said.

“We’re not yet at that point where our system is not able to cope, but we are getting closer.”

Hinshaw said public health officials need to balance the benefits of further mandatory shutdowns against the risks.

“We know that restrictions have an impact on other aspects of people’s health,” she said.

“We’re trying to give Albertans every opportunity to work with us in this voluntary way before we put in place those mandatory measures — if we need to do that, based on that impact on our acute care system.”

Also Tuesday, Hinshaw said Alberta is further restricting asymptomatic testing to people who have come into contact with a known case or are linked to an outbreak.

7:10 p.m.: early this month in the northern Mexico border city of Mexicali, authorities said.

About 300 people attended the Oct. 3 nuptials of a soap opera actor and the daughter of a businessman, Alonso Oscar Pérez Rico, the health secretary of Baja California state said Monday.

Pérez Rico told local media that there were apparently no masks or temperature checks at the event and that the organizers also did not have permission to hold an event of that size during the pandemic.

7:03 p.m.: Colorado’s governor says he won’t impose new statewide restrictions for addressing what he calls an alarming acceleration of new coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.

Gov. Jared Polis said Tuesday that he will instead encourage the people of Colorado to take responsibility for mask wearing, social distancing, getting tested, self-quarantining and other behaviours to stem the virus’s spread.

Polis says roughly 80% of the pandemic fight comes down to personal decisions. He also says local health agencies are best suited to deal with any rising cases among their residents.

The state reported 1,208 new confirmed cases Tuesday and 417 hospitalizations.

6:47 p.m.: Health-care workers, businesses and non-profits could receive liability protection against COVID-19-related lawsuits under, but critics said the bill would result in extra protection for long-term care providers who failed residents during the pandemic.

Attorney General Doug Downey said that if passed, the proposed law would ensure that anyone making an “honest effort” to follow public health guidelines while working or volunteering would not be exposed to liability.

6:33 p.m.: Canada’s chief public health doctor.

Dr. Theresa Tam says when false information is spread — either intentionally or not — it does not help public health officials ensure the public has the information they need to make the right choices.

“As I reflect on the unprecedented pandemic that we have, there’s also I think the pandemic that’s occurred in the age of social media, and many different ways in which information is spread faster than the virus itself,” Tam said Tuesday at one of her regular news conferences on Parliament Hill.

6:06 p.m.: Top defence officials have while painting a gloomy picture of how the pandemic could affect the military and country for the next year – if not longer.

The order and assessment are contained in a new directive to military personnel and Defence Department officials issued Tuesday by chief of defence staff Gen. Jonathan Vance and Defence Department deputy minister Jody Thomas.

It represents the latest call to arms to service members since March, when the Armed Forces was first put on high alert in anticipation of requests for assistance as COVID-19 spread across the country.

5:50 p.m.: For the first time in nearly 50 years, , according to a study released Tuesday by the New School university in New York City.

The pandemic has wreaked havoc on employment for people of all ages. But researchers found that during its course, workers 55 and older lost jobs sooner, were rehired slower and continue to face higher job losses than their counterparts ages 35 to 54.

5:27 p.m.: Quebec’s health-care system is “running on empty,” as the province reported 33 new hospitalizations from COVID-19.

But while Legault expressed sympathy for the exhaustion and frustration of nurses working in hospitals, he said his government could not offer them raises above the level of inflation during ongoing contract talks.

“I’m ready to do pretty much everything. I’m open to all the solutions to reduce nurses’ workload,” he said.

“The only thing we have to understand is that we can’t both make financial efforts to reduce workload and simultaneously give salary increases beyond inflation.”

3:24 p.m.: Quebec’s director of public health to protect him against threats from people upset with his pandemic-related health orders.

Dr. Horacio Arruda told reporters he was assigned a driver and bodyguard after the Public Security Department evaluated the threats that had been made against him.

Arruda said the security measures have been in place “since the start” but he didn’t elaborate.

Last Thursday, a small group of protesters showed up at Arruda’s private home in a suburb north of Montreal.

In July, Arruda filed a police complaint after his address and home phone number were posted online.

Arruda said he believes in the right to protest but said his concern is with those who may use demonstrations to cause mischief.

2:50 p.m.: As Argentina , it is now smaller cities like Ushuaia that are seeing some of the most notable upticks. Doctors have had to quadruple the number of beds for COVID-19 patients over the last month. At least 60 per cent of those tested recently are coming back positive for the virus.

Across Latin America, three other nations are expected to reach the 1 million case milestone in the coming weeks — Colombia, Mexico and Peru. The grim mark comes as Latin America continues to register some of the world’s highest daily case counts. And though some nations have seen important declines, overall there has been little relief, with cases dropping in one municipality only to escalate in another.

The trajectory is showing that the pandemic is likely to leave no corner of Latin America unscathed.

“The second wave is arriving without ever having finished the first,” said Dr. Luis Jorge Hernández, a public health professor at the University of the Andes in Colombia.

Argentina has seen cases spiral despite instituting one of the world’s longest lockdowns. Colombia’s major cities have seen a dip, but smaller areas like the department of Caldas in the coffee region are only now reaching a peak. Peru’s overall numbers have dropped, but officials recently reported 12 regions are spiking back up. Mexico, likewise, has seen a rise in a quarter of all states over the last week.

2:20 p.m.: Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin announced a tough new lockdown. From midnight Wednesday, non-essential shops must close, restaurants will be limited to takeout, people must stay within five kilometres of their homes and visits to other households are banned.

It’s a near-return to the severe restrictions imposed by the government in March, although schools, construction sites and manufacturing industries will remain open. Martin said that if people complied with the restrictions, which will be in place until Dec. 1, the country would be able to celebrate Christmas “in a meaningful way.”

Ireland, which has a population of almost 5 million, has recorded 1,852 coronavirus deaths.

2:20 p.m.: Iran has reported a single-day record of more than 5,000 coronavirus cases.

Iran’s health ministry reported 322 deaths, pushing the death toll over 31,000. The new cases on Tuesday eclipsed the previous high of 4,830 last week.

Hospitals in the hard-hit capital of Tehran are overflowing. The increase comes after Iranians packed cafes and restaurants at vacation spots during recent national holidays and the re-opening of schools last month.

The government closed museums, libraries, beauty salons, schools and universities in Tehran earlier this month and imposed a mask mandate outdoors.

Iran officials have resisted a total lockdown because they don’t want to further weaken an economy already devastated by unprecedented U.S. sanctions. The Trump administration re-imposed economic sanctions on Iran after withdrawing in 2018 from Tehran’s nuclear accord with world powers.

2 p.m.: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau when considering how to celebrate Halloween next week.

The question of how to handle the spooky evening is top of mind for many parents who are trying to assess a patchwork of regional health advice, guidance and stern warnings against trick-or-treating.

Health authorities in Ontario have advised against it in the hot spots of Toronto, Peel Region, York Region and Ottawa.

But Quebec Premier François Legault has said the pastime can go ahead if participants wear face masks and head out with family rather than friends, even though the province is Canada’s viral epicentre.

Trudeau acknowledged the difficulty involved in forgoing Halloween.

“We know that it’s not easy, and it’s frustrating,” he said Tuesday. “Unfortunately all of us are having to make sacrifices of different types, particularly kids.”

The Trudeau family lives in Ottawa, which has a Stage 2 designation, so the prime minister said his children are staying home.

“Listening to public health officials means that my family will not be going trick-or-treating this year, because in Ottawa and in Ontario in red zones like Ottawa they are not encouraging or not recommending trick-or-treating, and therefore we won’t be,” he said.

“A friend of mine suggested that maybe we could do an Easter-style treasure hunt for candy throughout the house and yard, and that’s something that we’re also reflecting on,” Trudeau said.

“I think families will be creative in how they respond to giving their kids as fun a holiday as we can while always listening to public health officials and respecting local guidelines.”

In a message aimed partly at young people, the country’s top physician encouraged Canadians who use TikTok, Instagram and other social media to spread the word about healthy habits in order to keep the coronavirus “on a slow burn.”

“As each part of the country is experiencing the pandemic differently, people may be facing uncertainty about what action is needed to keep ourselves and our loved ones safe,” said Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer.

1:35 p.m.: Manitoba is reporting 109 new COVID-19 cases, with 88 of them in Winnipeg.

Health officials are also reporting outbreaks at one school and three long-term care homes in the city.

The greater Winnipeg region has been under stricter health orders, including mandatory mask use in public indoor areas, after numbers started climbing last month.

1:24 p.m. Ontario reported an increase of more than 100 cases with 821 new infections Tuesday and is allowing dance studios in Toronto, Peel, York and Ottawa to re-open.

Owners of dance studios had been pushing for change since the four hot zones went into modified Stage 2 restrictions, and a government review determined they are at less risk of transmission than gyms and fitness centres also closed in addition to indoor dining at bars, restaurants and food courts.

“They informed us that they were able to keep enough distance, that they were able to do that in a safe way,” Health Minister Christine Elliott said of dance studios.

“I know it is really difficult for some business owners to understand why they can’t be open,” added Elliott, who acknowledged “We’re still having conversations with other groups.”

12:30 p.m. AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc., the world’s largest cinema chain, while warning investors that it may need to file for bankruptcy, leaving its equity worthless.

AMC, contending with a liquidity crisis that threatens its ability to remain a going concern, said the equity distribution plan might not be enough. With $417.9 million (U.S.) in cash on hand, the company still needs a material amount of new funding by the end of the year to stay in business, it said in a filing Tuesday.

If AMC is unable to raise enough cash to meet its obligations, the company said it would file for bankruptcy or seek an out-of-court restructuring of its debts.

12:19 p.m.: The country is again being pushed to the brink of an election, over a demand by the Opposition Conservatives that a committee be set up to probe allegations of the misuse of public funds on COVID-19 relief programs.

The Liberals declared Tuesday that the vote on the Tories’ motion to create the committee will be a confidence matter, saying that if the opposition parties unite to pass it, that effectively means the House of Commons has lost faith in the government.

The Bloc Québécois moved swiftly to call the Liberals’ bluff, accusing them of theatrics and saying they will vote with the Conservatives to force the creation of the committee.

Canadians want answers and if that requires an election, it will be the fault of the Liberals, said Bloc leader Yves-François Blanchet.

“It’s their choice, it’s their fault, they are doing it,” he told the House of Commons as debate on the motion got underway.

11:05 a.m.: Ontario is reporting 821 new cases of COVID-19, and three new deaths due to the virus.

Health Minister Christine Elliott says 327 cases are in Toronto, 136 in Peel Region, 79 in Ottawa, and 64 in York Region.

The province says it has a backlog of 24,129 tests, and has conducted 24,049 tests since the last daily report.

In total, 274 people are hospitalized in Ontario due to COVID-19.

11:05 a.m.: The number of new cases in public schools across the province has jumped by 121 from the previous day, to a total of 793 in the last two weeks.

, the province reported 75 more students were infected for a total of 461 in the last two weeks; since school began there have been overall total of 810.

The data shows there are 22 more staff members for a total of 117 in the last two weeks — and an overall total of 223.

The latest report also shows 24 more individuals who weren’t identified for a total of 215 in that category — and an overall total of 396.

11 a.m.: In response to Monday’s recommendation to call off trick-or-treating this year, Brampton mayor Patrick Brown says he’s disappointed some elements of the night couldn’t be salvaged with creative health protocols, such as contactless candy collection.

“I wish it was different,” Brown said, adding he’s thinking up creative ways to salvage some of the fun, including the hosting of virtual contests for best costume.

“Ultimately, we have to listen to the advice of public health.”

Meanwhile, Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie said youngsters and their families will have to celebrate Halloween differently in COVID-19 hotspots like Peel, because not going door-to-door “is the best way to keep our city healthy and safe and reduce the spread of this virus.”

11 a.m.: Prince Edward Island is reporting one new case of COVID-19.

Dr. Heather Morrison, the chief public health officer, says the case involves a woman in her 20s who is a rotational worker and who travelled outside of the Atlantic bubble.

There are currently three active cases on the Island.

Since the pandemic began, P.E.I. has seen a total of 64 cases and all have been travel related.

10:40 a.m. Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole says he’s willing to change the name and mandate of a proposed committee to probe COVID-19 relief programs to make it clear his party doesn’t want to force an election.

The Liberals have said that in pushing for an “anticorruption committee,” the Tories are effectively saying they’ve lost confidence in the government, so the vote on setting it up ought to be one of confidence.

That means if the Tories get the support of the Bloc Québécois and NDP for the motion, they could topple the government.

O’Toole says the Liberals’ approach is nonsense and Canadians should be concerned if the Liberals would rather send them to the polls than answer what he called a “few simple questions.”

The stated point of the proposed committee is to take a deep look into three different COVID-19 relief programs, two with connections to longtime Liberals and one with an organization with close links to the party and to the Trudeau family.

But O’Toole says he’s now talking to the NDP and Bloc to see if they can agree on a revised mandate for the committee, as well as a new name, that would erase the possibility of a confidence vote on the motion.

10:20 a.m. (will be updated) Ontario is reporting 821 cases of COVID-19. Locally, there are 327 new cases in Toronto, 136 in Peel, 64 in York Region and 79 in Ottawa. More than 24,000 tests were completed.

9:39 a.m. The British government and officials in Manchester, England’s second-largest city, were still talking Tuesday after a noon deadline passed for the city to agree to tighter coronavirus measures.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who is struggling to impose his plan for localized restrictions on restive regions, spoke by phone to Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham on Tuesday afternoon, Johnson’s office said. The prime minister is expected to give an update on coronavirus restrictions later at a news conference.

Johnson’s government is resisting a recommendation from its scientific advisers to have a short “circuit-breaker” lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus. Instead it has adopted a three-tier system for England, with areas classed as medium, high or very high virus risk. In the top tier, pubs have to close and people are barred from mixing with members of other households.

So far only the Liverpool and Lancashire regions of northwest England have been placed in Tier 3, the highest level. Nearby Greater Manchester, with a population of almost 3 million, has been holding out for more support for workers and businesses affected by the restrictions.

“We’re trying to respond to a pandemic on the cheap, that’s how it feels,” Burnham said.

9:10 a.m. An employee at a Shoppers Drug Mart in Mississauga recently tested positive for COVID-19.

According to the , one employee at the tested positive on a presumptive test.

Management was notified of the case on Oct. 19 and the employee’s last day of work was on Oct. 13.

The company said once management is notified of a positive test result, the store undergoes a deep clean and sanitization.

9 a.m. In a seniors housing building in east-end Toronto, 69-year-old Maureen Clohessy has taped over her power outlets, hoping to keep bedbugs out of the bachelor unit she’s called home for three years.

Each day, she watches for the scuttling critters, her eyes scanning from her plugs to her ceiling in an apartment on the seventh floor. The building at 828 Kingston Road is known as Glen Stewart Acres, and it’s one of several senior-specific buildings operated by the Toronto Community Housing Corporation.

Like other community housing buildings in Toronto, Glen Stewart Acres has battled pests from bedbugs to rodents and cockroaches. The housing operator saw a leap of 17.4 per cent in demands for pest treatments across all their buildings last year. Clohessy’s building was supposed to be treated top-to-bottom this spring. But then the pandemic hit — and the process was put indefinitely on hold.

8:32 a.m. The rate of COVID-19 testing in the part of the city hit hardest by the virus is lagging behind other neighbourhoods, data newly posted by Toronto Public Health shows.

That data, released Monday and current to Oct. 4, shows that eight of the 10 neighbourhoods with the highest per cent positivity for COVID-19 are in the northwest part of the city, .

At the same time, all eight of those neighbourhoods had rates of testing below the average for neighbourhoods where there was data available.

On Monday, the city’s board of health called on the province to increase the availability and accessibility of pop-up testing in neighbourhoods disproportionately affected by the pandemic.

Dr. Eileen de Villa, the city’s medical officer of health, said Monday that more testing is needed to “fully understand” what’s happening in those neighbourhoods. Testing is the responsibility of the province.

8:30 a.m. The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health says three more patients have tested positive for COVID-19.

That brings the total number of cases at its 1-4 Unit in downtown Toronto up to five after two were announced on Sunday.

CAMH is one of three hospitals in Toronto with active outbreaks,

Toronto Western Hospital said on Sunday five staff and three patients in two of its units have tested positive.

St. Joseph’s Health Centre was reporting outbreaks in four units on Sunday.

The province says an outbreak is declared when two or more people test positive for the virus within 14 days who could have reasonably caught COVID-19 at the hospital.

8:10 a.m. Health Canada is recalling a product labelled a hand sanitizer but that it has determined is counterfeit.

The government department says a counterfeit version of the authorized Daily Shield hand sanitizer has been found for sale at a Dollarama store in Thunder Bay.

Health Canada warns the false version may not be effective at killing bacteria and viruses, and may pose serious risks to health.

It also says that the unauthorized product is suspected to contain methanol, which is not authorized for use in hand sanitizers and could cause severe adverse reactions or death when ingested.

The counterfeit version is labelled with NPN 80098979, Lot 6942; Expiry May 2023 and is sold in a 250 mL format.

7:30 a.m. The number of passengers screened in a single day for flights in the U.S. topped one million for the first time since COVID-19 infections began to spike last March.

The notable milestone, reached Sunday, signifies both the progress made since the darkest days of pandemic for the devastated U.S. airline industry, when fewer than 100,000 people were screened per day in April, and how far it still has to go.

The million plus passengers screened Sunday compares with 2.6 million on the same day last year, or roughly 60% fewer, according to the Transportation Security Administration.

The TSA said that the 6.1 million passengers at U.S. checkpoints the week of Oct. 12 through Oct. 18 was the greatest volume measured since the start of the pandemic.

Vacation plans and business trips were frozen in the spring as millions took shelter. With so little known about the virus, few wanted to board planes or walk through an airport even if they could.

Airlines received $50 billion (U.S.) in cash and loans from Congress in March on the condition that they held off on layoffs at least through October. Airlines are now warning of mass layoffs while lobbying Congress and the White House for another $25 billion (U.S.) to pay workers for the next six months.

7:15 a.m. Colombian cyclist Fernando Gaviria has tested positive for the coronavirus and has been withdrawn from the Giro d’Italia.

Gaviria and a staff member for Team AG2R La Mondiale were the only positives out of 492 tests carried out Sunday and Monday.

Gaviria’s UAE Team Emirates says the rider “was immediately isolated following the test result and is feeling well and is completely asymptomatic.”

The team notes that Gaviria also had COVID-19 in March.

Gaviria has won five stages at the Giro during his career.

Overall contenders Simon Yates and Steven Kruijswijk had already been withdrawn from the race after testing positive. Australian standout Michael Matthews also was withdrawn. The Mitchelton-Scott and Jumbo-Visma teams withdrew their entire squads last week following a series of positive results from the first rest day.

7:10 a.m. Rugby Europe has suspended all internationals to the end of November, including the long-delayed last round of the men’s championship.

On Nov. 1 were scheduled Romania vs. Belgium and Georgia vs. Russia, and on Nov. 15 Spain vs. Portugal. They have been postponed since March.

Georgia has already retained the title, while Romania is in last place, which drops the occupier into a promotion-relegation match against the waiting Netherlands.

“Our players and our officials are mostly ‘amateurs,’” Rugby Europe president Octavian Morariu said on Tuesday. “We cannot expose them to the virus or to quarantine periods that would be problematic for them.”

5:53 a.m.: A number of fishing crew who flew into New Zealand on chartered planes have the coronavirus.

Health officials said Tuesday that 11 have tested positive so far and another 14 cases are being investigated.

The crew members have been in quarantine at a Christchurch hotel since they arrived, and tested positive during routine testing, officials said. The news could deal a blow to New Zealand’s efforts to restart its fishing industry, which has struggled to find local workers to crew vessels.

Jeremy Helson, the chief executive of Seafood New Zealand, said all the men tested negative before flying to New Zealand. “While we await to see how many cases there are, the fact that they were all detected in quarantine shows the system is working well,” Helson said in a statement.

The origin of the infected crew members wasn’t immediately clear, although a number of fishing crew have been arriving in New Zealand in recent days from Russia and Ukraine.

New Zealand has managed to stamp out community spread of the virus.

5:51 a.m.: Near the end of September, with coronavirus cases falling and more schools and businesses reopening, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration urged restraint, citing a statistical model that predicted a startling 89-per-cent increase in virus hospitalizations in the next month.

That hasn’t happened. Instead, state data shows hospitalizations have fallen by about 15 per cent since that warning while the weekly average number of new cases continues to decline even as other more populous states like Florida, Ohio and Illinois see increases.

California’s good news isn’t enough to change what Newsom calls his “slow” and “stubborn” approach to reopening the world’s fifth-largest economy. He again cautioned people against “being overly exuberant” about those coronavirus numbers, pointing to a “decline in the rate of decline” of hospitalizations.

5:50 a.m.: A Cabinet minister says Pakistan has witnessed a 140 per-cent increase in fatalities from COVID-19 in recent weeks due to widespread violations of social distancing rules.

Asad Umar, the planning and development minister who oversees Pakistan’s response to coronavirus, warned on Twitter “We will lose both lives and livelihoods” if people did not adhere to social distancing rules.

His comments Tuesday came shortly after the military-backed Command and Operations Center reported 14 deaths and 625 new cases in the past 24 hours.

Prime Minister Imran Khan had warned on Monday that Pakistan’s big cities could face a second wave of COVID-19 in the coming weeks because of increasing pollution in winter. Pakistan has reported 324,084 cases, including 6,673 COVID-19 deaths.

5:49 a.m.: As Argentina passed 1 million virus cases Monday, it is now smaller cities like Ushuaia that are seeing some of the most notable upticks. Doctors have had to quadruple the number of beds for COVID-19 patients over the last month. At least 60 per cent of those tested recently are coming back positive for the virus.

“We were the example of the country,” said Dr. Carlos Guglielmi, director of the Ushuaia Regional Hospital. “Evidently someone arrived with the coronavirus.”

Across Latin America, three other nations are expected to reach the 1 million case milestone in the coming weeks — Colombia, Mexico and Peru. The grim mark comes as Latin America continues to register some of the world’s highest daily case counts. And though some nations have seen important declines, overall there has been little relief, with cases dropping in one municipality only to escalate in another.

The trajectory is showing that the pandemic is likely to leave no corner of Latin America unscathed.

5:44 a.m.: Canadians continue to experience mental health difficulties due to the pandemic, with one in four saying their stress level is higher than during the first COVID-19 wave, according to a new poll.

The online survey by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies found that only 19 per cent of Canadians say their mental health is better now than in March and April as infection rates tick up and autumn sets in.

However, about 54 per cent said their mental state is about the same as when the coronavirus first struck the country.

Participants cited concerns about the length and severity of the pandemic as their biggest source of anxiety, followed closely by social isolation and family health.

“If we cannot see extended family during the holidays and rekindle that positive energy that we get from family and friends, it might lead to a long winter,” said Leger executive vice-president Christian Bourque.

“It’s almost like, when is this thing going to end?”

4 a.m.: The latest numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Canada as of 4 a.m. EDT on Oct. 20, 2020:

There are 200,939 confirmed cases in Canada.

-Quebec: 94,429 confirmed (including 6,044 deaths, 79,529 resolved)

-Ontario: 65,075 confirmed (including 3,050 deaths, 55,978 resolved)

-Alberta: 22,673 confirmed (including 292 deaths, 19,243 resolved)

-British Columbia: 11,687 confirmed (including 253 deaths, 9,753 resolved)

-Manitoba: 3,382 confirmed (including 42 deaths, 1,597 resolved)

-Saskatchewan: 2,396 confirmed (including 25 deaths, 1,973 resolved)

-Nova Scotia: 1,097 confirmed (including 65 deaths, 1,026 resolved)

-New Brunswick: 313 confirmed (including 3 deaths, 207 resolved)

-Newfoundland and Labrador: 287 confirmed (including 4 deaths, 272 resolved)

-Prince Edward Island: 63 confirmed (including 60 resolved)

-Yukon: 17 confirmed (including 15 resolved)

-Repatriated Canadians: 13 confirmed (including 13 resolved)

-Northwest Territories: 5 confirmed (including 5 resolved), 3 presumptive

-Nunavut: No confirmed cases

Total: 201,440 (3 presumptive, 201,437 confirmed including 9,778 deaths, 169,671 resolved)

Monday 6:35 p.m.: The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health has reported a COVID-19 outbreak at its Queen Street West site, with five patients testing positive for the virus. It is the first outbreak at Canada’s largest mental health hospital since April.

Two patients were said to have COVID-19 on Sunday. By Monday at 5 p.m., CAMH updated their website to reveal three more patients had tested positive, bringing the total to five current patients with the virus.

The new outbreak brings the number of patients who have tested positive for the virus at CAMH to 29 since the pandemic began. Nineteen have since recovered and three were discharged.

‘Not enough being said’: Friends and family wonder about cyclist’s death in Wasaga Beach

Friends and family of a father of three are struggling to understand the circumstances that led to his death.

Nicholas Enslow was cycling along Lyons Court in the middle of the night, between Oct. 1 and 2, when he was struck by a large truck, according to his former partner and mother of his children, Jessica Meek.

He died several hours later at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto. Some of his organs were donated.

“He saved five people’s lives,” said Meek, who had been split from Enslow for several years but still maintained a friendship.

Their children range in age from nine to 12.

Police have neither released details about the incident nor responded to requests for comment from Simcoe.com. Meek said Enslow’s mother was given few details about her son’s death other than police believe he had swerved into the path of the truck.

“She just feels there’s not enough being said,” Meek said.

Meek said the driver of the truck stayed with Enslow until the arrival of emergency services. Enslow was taken to the hospital in Collingwood, then airlifted to Toronto.

Meek said the 36-year-old man — he would have been 37 in mid October — was “a troubled” individual who had drug issues.

Meek said police have told the family the only thing he seemed to have in his possession was a prescription for pain medication.

Enslow was homeless, Meek said, and would bounce between the Out of the Cold shelter in Collingwood, living outside and crashing at the homes of friends and family.

“He’d slept in tents, if he could get a couch for the night somewhere … wherever,” Meek said. “We’re not sure why he was out that way (on Lyons Court); it could have been because he was between Collingwood and Wasaga Beach a lot.”

More troubling, Meek said, is his wallet and backpack are both missing. Enslow received Ontario Disability Support Payments and, without a bank account, would have had the cash from a cheque he had cashed a day earlier.

“He was never without his backpack,” Meek said. “There’s no doubt in my mind he wouldn’t have (lost) his backpack and wallet — (as someone who is homeless), that’s one of those things he would have kept with him constantly.”

He had pictures of himself with his children in the wallet — items that Enslow’s mother is desperate to have returned to her.

“Nick was a good, kind-hearted person,” Meek said. “He had his troubles, but he was always caring, and he would help others, even if it meant him not having.

“He was a great dad. He hadn’t been able to be in (his children’s) lives a lot lately, mostly phone calls, and he loved his mom. We’d all tried to make things better for him, but it was rough.”