Category: nskiorhji

ProudWest FunZone offering collectibles and fireworks in Stroud

There is a new place for all things fun in Innisfil.

Head to ProudWest FunZone – Collectibles and Art, located at , Unit 14, for Funko Pops, toys, sports collectibles and fireworks.

ProudWest Pyrotechnics has stores across Canada, but the one in Innisfil is a little different.

“We realized we had so much space in here we wanted to do everything we like to do, so we just made a giant big kids store — well, kids of all ages, really,” said co-owner Jake Mathias. “We’re collectibles and also an art store, as well as a recording studio and photography studio.”

Mathias, who helped organize Barrie’s Live Music Show, said he’d like to use his new business as a base for more charitable efforts in Innisfil. He’s currently collecting donations for the Innisfil Food Bank.

“We’d like give back a little even more local,” he said.

For more information, call or visit .

‘This is life-changing’: Mom of three from Tottenham wins major lotto prize

Tottenham resident Amber Chase’s bank account has grown by six figures after winning the top prize playing Instant Crossword Tripler.

“This is my first big win,” said Chase, who won $100,000. “I like instant tickets because they are fun to play.”

The mother of three checked her tickets using the OLG Lottery app.

“I was so shocked that my mom had to help me scan it,” she said. “We cried happy tears.”

Chase plans to save her win for school and her children.

“This is life-changing,” she said. “I feel like this win is the universe telling me that I’m doing things right in my life.”

The winning ticket was purchased at Mac’s on Queen Street in Tottenham.


MPP Andrea Khanjin acclaimed as candidate by Barrie-Innisfil Conservative Riding Association

When Barrie-Innisfil residents head to the polls in 2022 for the provincial election, the incumbent MPP will be on the ballot.

On Sept. 28, the Barrie-Innisfil Conservative Riding Association announced that its members had acclaimed Andrea Khanjin, the area’s current MPP, as the Barrie-Innisfil candidate for the 2022 Ontario election.

Khanjin thanked the association online.

“It has been an honour to be your MPP since 2018, and during this time we have achieved so much by taking great ideas from our home and bringing them to Queen’s Park,” she wrote.

The next Ontario election is scheduled to happen on or before June 2, 2022.

‘It has been incredibly stressful’: Midland nurse works to keep COVID-19 from spreading

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, staff at Georgian Bay General Hospital have courageously put themselves in harm’s way while working to fight the spread of COVID-19. 

One of those front-line workers is Zoe Robitaille, a registered practical nurse who works in GBGH’s COVID-19 unit.

“To be honest, it has been incredible stressful; frightening at times,” said Robitaille. “I know myself and my team, we are just terrified of this getting out or bringing it home.”


Our #COVIDHEROES series shines the spotlight on 21 people in Simcoe County who helped us endure this pandemic.

Read about all of our heroes here –


Robitaille works in 2 East, the unit at GBGH that’s been treating all potential and confirmed COVID-19 cases in Midland, Penetanguishene, Tiny and Tay.

In mid-March, the hospital split 2 East in half and created a hot zone and a cold zone. 

“The hot side is where we put all of the patients who are pending a COVID-19 test or have tested positive for the virus,” said Robitaille. “When you are working on the hot side, you are isolated.”

Only a handful of nurses are assigned to the hot side each shift. They are all covered head-to-toe in personal protective equipment and ready to deal with any potential COVID-19 case that arrives at the Midland hospital.

“It is a new virus. We still don’t know a lot about it. So, things are changing all the time,” said Robitaille. “It has definitely been stressful.”

As case counts rise, precautions tighten and fear goes up.

Staff at GBGH have been extremely flexible in adapting to the ever-changing landscape created by COVID-19, but it’s been difficult.

“You are always worried. We are always nitpicking (our own symptoms),” said Robitaille. “Personally, I am really careful. I make sure I don’t stop anywhere on the way home and I use a different bathroom to shower when I get home.”

The lives of hospital staff have been dramatically impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, with many adjusting their living situations and isolating themselves in order to continue working. The community is grateful, with many referring to front-line workers as heroes

“Personally, I don’t feel like a hero. We are just doing our jobs,” said Robitaille. “Yes, it’s a new virus. Yes’ it’s scary. But we deal with infectious diseases all the time at the hospital.”

Alliston hospital clarifies comments about building’s fire safety status

Stevenson Memorial Hospital (SMH) and the local fire chief are providing clarification and context to some questions that came up recently at Queen’s Park regarding the building’s fire safety status.

On Nov. 23, Simcoe-Grey MPP Jim Wilson received support for his private member’s resolution calling on the government to continue to support planning work for the construction of SMH in Alliston and Collingwood General and Marine Hospital.

, he talked about how a “massive investment” would be needed in order for the building to have a proper sprinkler system and how staff are forced to store equipment in the cramped hallways.

He even said the fire chief has officially put the hospital on notice about the building being in contravention of the Ontario Fire Code.

The hospital’s facilities manager, Wayne Willcott, told Simcoe.com the building is not in violation of the code, but it has been given a deadline of Jan. 1, 2025, to install a sprinkler system in the 56-year-old building.

He noted that when the hospital was constructed in 1964, it was not a requirement at the time to have a system. There is only one small area that has a sprinkler system, the CT diagnostic imaging area, which was built more recently.

He said the hospital was “grandfathered in” as new safety regulations were passed over the years.

Hospital communications officer Rachel Ogorek said it has been estimated to cost between $850,000 to $2 million to outfit the building with sprinklers.

“It’s certainly not something we can manage without the support of the ministry supporting the redevelopment plan and packaging it all together,” she said.

As for the equipment being left in hallways, Willcott said these are the mobile work stations used by nurses. He said when the building was originally constructed, nurses did all of their paper work at the nursing station.

To ensure there is still access through the halls, he said the equipment is kept to one side.

He said this won’t be an issue with the redeveloped hospital, noting it will contain cubicles in the halls to store the work stations.

New Tecumseth Fire Chief Dan Heydon told Simcoe.com that his staff met with hospital management last year to discuss how the facility can achieve full compliance of the fire code come 2025. He said the code was updated in 2014, requiring sprinklers to be provided in health-care facilities, care occupancies and retirement homes by Jan. 1, 2025.

Heydon said space has been a long-standing challenge at the hospital, noting how the hospital is servicing many more patients than it was designed for.

“New Tecumseth Fire and Stevenson Memorial staff have been working co-operatively for many years to quickly address any concerns that arise to maintain compliance with the Ontario Fire Code,” he said. “There are no outstanding fire code violations at Stevenson Memorial Hospital.”

Willcott said the annual fire inspection was recently completed, and only some minor issues were found, like faded stickers on doors.

He said many things have been done over the years to make sure the building meets the code, like installing door openers on fire exits and providing evacuation chairs to move patients safely down stairwells.

‘Raising the alarm for weeks now’: Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority concerned about looming decision

Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority (LSRCA) Board chair Wayne Emmerson isn’t mincing words when it comes to what he sees as a threat to the environment.

He released a statement Dec. 5 sharing his disappointment as the province steps closer to amending the Conservation Authorities Act.

“LSRCA has been raising the alarm for weeks now,” Emmerson said in a press release.

A month ago, the province introduced Bill 229 — the .

In particular, Schedule 6 of the bill is proposing changes that limit the power of conservation authorities.

It would limit their ability to enter land for surveying, expropriate land as required and study the watershed for ways it can be restored, developed and managed.

After seeing the proposal, several municipalities, MPPs and environmental organizations spoke out in opposition.

Conservation Ontario also made a .

So the province amended some of its changes, making the announcement Dec. 4.

But the changes don’t go far enough, Emmerson said.

“In fact, we understand that new changes have now been introduced that will force conservation authorities to contravene our mandate to protect people, infrastructure and the environment,” Emmerson wrote.

“If the province proceeds, LSRCA will be forced to issue permits to allow for development to proceed, through Ministers Zoning Orders, regardless of the impacts to the environment and our communities,” he wrote. “This action will dismantle the very system put in place since Hurricane Hazel in 1954, to keep our communities healthy and out of harm’s way from flooding and other hazards created by poor land-use planning.”

Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority (NVCA) chair Keith White agreed the new changes don’t go far enough to prevent flooding and erosion in his watershed area.

“With the new changes, conservation authorities are basically the only landowners in Ontario who cannot appeal most planning decisions, which affect their lands,” White wrote in his press release. “We are the second-largest landowners in Ontario, and this is in conflict with one of the proposed mandatory programs for conservation authorities, which is to manage their own lands to protect sensitive ecosystems.

Schedule 6 is set to go to third and final reading in the legislature Dec. 7.

‘The situation is very sad and painful.’ Relative of migrant worker who died of COVID-19 speaks of ‘overwhelming’ grief

It wasn’t until he met his uncle at Mexico City’s bustling airport in April that Amador Alcantara realized they shared the same destination: a sprawling Norfolk County farm called .

Alcantara was happy. He’d spent almost 20 years travelling back and forth to Canada as a migrant worker. This year, he’d have family by his side.

But in the months that followed, 200 of Alcantara’s co-workers would test positive for . His uncle, , 55, would not survive the massive outbreak — one of the largest in the entire province.

In an interview with the Star, the first since his uncle died in June, Alcantara described Chaparro as a respectful and friendly man whose death has overwhelmed his family.

“We shared a lot of moments together while we were working,” said Alcantara. “The situation is very sad and painful.”

On Tuesday, Alcantara also testified about his experiences with Scotlynn’s outbreak before the Ontario Labour Relations Board.

It forms part of a reprisal complaint filed last month by , who was Alcantara’s bunkmate. The claim alleges Flores was fired and threatened with deportation by Scotlynn after raising concerns about safety issues at the farm.

Scotlynn has denied the allegations — and in a hearing last month, the farm’s founder Robert Biddle said he could not have fired Flores because he was sailing to a “small island” on the date in question.

In testimony Tuesday, Alcantara said he was present when Flores was terminated.

“The boss said (to Flores), “I don’t want anyone who is causing conflict on this farm, you have to go back to Mexico,’” said Alcantara.

The reprisal complaint brings into focus migrant workers’ ability to effectively assert their rights amidst a pandemic that has led to an estimated 1,300 farm labourers testing positive for COVID-19 in Ontario alone.

“This case is emblematic of the deep structural problems in the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program and the system of temporary migration in Canada,” said Karen Cocq of Migrant Workers Alliance for Change (MWAC).

Lack of permanent immigration status “effectively condemns” migrant workers to abuse because employers can send them back to their home countries for almost any reason, she added.

Separately on Tuesday, the provincial and federal governments jointly announced $26.6 million in funding for agricultural employers to improve health and safety on farms. Under the program, farmers can claim up to $15,000 for “preventative expenses” including workplace modifications, protective gear, and transportation. They can also apply for up to $100,000 to complete housing modifications and other larger investments in safety.

“Protecting the health and well-being of all farm workers who are helping ensure the food security for Canadians has been a top priority since the beginning of the pandemic,” said Marie-Claude Bibeau, federal Minister of Agriculture.

“This isn’t the kind of measure that responds fundamentally to the core problems built into the program,” said Cocq.

In his interview with the Star, Alcantara said his uncle was asked by the Mexican authorities to go to Scotlynn this year because high turnover at the farm was making it difficult to fulfil the required number of workers. The Star has previously on the history of complaints filed by migrant workers at Scotlynn, including long-standing reports of bedbug infestations, overcrowding, and unsafe working conditions.

Housing was amongst Alcantara’s concerns when he arrived in Canada in April, he told the labour board Tuesday.

“There wasn’t space to distance,” he said through a translator. “It was very close quarters.”

, who runs Scotlynn and is the son of founder Robert Biddle, has previously said he spent over $700,000 on quarantine measures and provides “climate-controlled” housing with lounge areas and soccer fields for leisure time.

After their mandatory two weeks quarantine in a hotel, Alcantara told the Star he and his uncle were placed in different apartments of the same housing complex. The bunkhouse was known colloquially as los quemados — the burned — after a small fire caused years ago by a worker who left a pot too long on the stove.

A few weeks into the season, Alcantara told the Star he noticed his uncle looking ill. Initially, Alcantara put it down to cold weather and lack of warm clothes. But soon, workers sharing an apartment with Chaparro said his condition had worsened.

On June 20, after several weeks battling the virus including hospitalization and intubation, Chaparro died. Scotlynn informed workers that night. Alcantara told the labour board he watched Flores tell supervisors they “should have done more for that man who died.”

“(The supervisor) said, ‘Who are you to say this to me? He’s not even one of your relatives. Why are you complaining?’” said Alcantara, who testified over Zoom from Mexico City in a maple leaf-emblazoned baseball cap.

The next day Flores was terminated, according to submissions made on his behalf by Parkdale Community Legal Services (PCLS). Flores subsequently took refuge in a safe house, the PCLS submissions said.

In closing arguments Tuesday, Scotlynn lawyer Paul Hosack said there was “simply no evidence” to support the claim’s allegations.

Hosack said Flores had spoken up about “something that happened in the past” and that the farm had reached out to Flores after he fled to tell him he could return to work.

“Our position is the claim should be dismissed,” said Hosack.

PCLS lawyer John No said the return-to-work offer was only made after Flores filed his complaint at the board. Noting that employers carry the burden of proof in reprisal cases, No said no evidence had been presented to provide an alternative explanation for Flores’s termination.

Flores is seeking $40,400 in lost future earnings and damages. He also hopes to see broader change to protect workers, he told the board Tuesday.

“I am just a farm worker tired of what is happening to us,” he said. “We have to leave our homes and families and cultures at home in Mexico to serve here in Canada and I think permanent residency is the least we are owed.”

With hearings concluded, labour board alternate chair Matthew Wilson will issue a written decision on the reprisal case in the coming months.

For Alcantara, who has now returned to Mexico, being back in the hometown he shared with his uncle is a source of comfort. But for Chaparro’s wife and four children, the grief is still paralyzing.

“It has taken a toll on them as a family,” Alcantara said. “But they feel there’s nothing they can do.”

Sara Mojtehedzadeh is a Toronto-based reporter covering work and wealth for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Today’s coronavirus news: Ontario reporting 1,890 cases, 28 more deaths; Toronto has 553 new infections; York Region hospitals at ‘tipping point’

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.

10:48 p.m.: In El Paso, Texas, hospitals reported that just 13 of 400 intensive care beds were not occupied last week. In Fargo, North Dakota, there were just three. In Albuquerque, New Mexico, there were zero.

More than a third of Americans live in areas where hospitals are running critically short of intensive care beds, federal data show, revealing a newly detailed picture of the nation’s hospital crisis during the deadliest week of the COVID-19 epidemic.

Hospitals serving more than 100 million Americans reported having fewer than 15 per cent of intensive care beds still available as of last week, according to a Times analysis of data reported by hospitals and released by the Department of Health and Human Services.

Many areas are even worse off: One in 10 Americans — across a large swath of the Midwest, South and Southwest — lives in an area where intensive care beds are either completely full, or fewer than 5 per cent of beds are available. At these levels, experts say maintaining existing standards of care for the sickest patients may be difficult or impossible.

10:46 p.m.: The usually stoic health director of Los Angeles County became emotional while describing “a devastating increase in deaths,” with the total hitting 8,075.

Barbara Ferrer said Wednesday that this week the county recorded an average of 43 daily deaths — up from about 12 a day in mid-November.

Ferrer fought back tears as she called the deaths “an incalculable loss to their friends and their family and the community.”

Hospitals in Los Angeles are dealing with a surge in COVID-19 patients, with new admissions running near 500 a day. Officials anticipate that number will increase to 700 a day by next week.

10:45 p.m.: The founder of the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium says she has concerns about the availability of potential coronavirus vaccines.

Dr. Ala Stanford said Wednesday that “everyone who needs a test cannot get a test. So, I do have concerns about the vaccine availability.”

She says it is important that vaccines are received by people “going to work every day in contact with the public, bringing it home to their communities and transmitting it.” She recommends hospitals “be required to have a culturally competent education program in place” about potential vaccines.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration will decide whether to approve a Pfizer vaccine within days. If approved, the first recipients are likely health care workers and nursing home residents.

10:26 p.m.: Hawaii will furlough more than 10,000 state workers two days a month to balance the state’s budget as tax revenues decline due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Gov. David Ige said Wednesday the furloughs will take effect Jan. 1 and cut payroll spending 9.2 per cent. The governor says he and members of his Cabinet will get the same percentage salary cut.

Nurses, firefighters, prison guards and others whose jobs involve around-the-clock operations won’t be required to furlough. Employees at airports and harbours whose pay is covered by federal funds will also not be furloughed. About 4,600 employees fall into this exempt category.

10:25 p.m.: A Texas state official who has been critical of measures ordered by Gov. Greg Abbott in efforts to slow the coronavirus pandemic says he has tested positive for the virus.

Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller was among an estimated 200 people who rallied outside Abbott’s home in October to protest his pandemic orders, including a continued statewide mask mandate and lockdowns.

In a statement Wednesday, the 65-year-old Miller says he has been quarantining at his ranch.

In his words: “Not feeling my best, but I’ve survived rodeo injuries, broken bones, hip, double knee and shoulder surgery, west nile virus and cancer, and I’m going to beat this too.”

9:21 p.m.: Secretary-General Antonio Guterres leaving poor people around the globe watching preparations for inoculations against the coronavirus in some rich nations and wondering if and when they will be vaccinated.

The U.N. chief reiterated his call for vaccines to be treated as “a global public good,” available to everyone, everywhere on the planet, especially in Africa. And he appealed for $4.2 billion in the next two months for the World Health Organization’s COVAX program, an ambitious project to buy and deliver coronavirus vaccines for the world’s poorest people.

After a virtual U.N. meeting with the African Union, Guterres said at news conference that financing COVAX is the only way to guarantee vaccines will be available in Africa and other developing areas.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a high-level U.N. General Assembly meeting last week on COVID-19 that “the light at the end of the tunnel is growing steadily brighter” to end the pandemic. But, he added, vaccines “must be shared equally as global public goods, not as private commodities that widen inequalities and become yet another reason some people are left behind.”

9:20 p.m.: There are 435,330 confirmed cases in Canada.

_ Canada: 435,330 confirmed cases (72,336 active, 350,011 resolved, 12,983 deaths).The total case count includes 13 confirmed cases among repatriated travellers.

There were 6,295 new cases Wednesday from 78,579 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 8.0 per cent. The rate of active cases is 192.44 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 45,555 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 6,508.

There were 116 new reported deaths Wednesday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 658 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is 94. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is 0.25 per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 34.54 per 100,000 people.

There have been 12,226,406 tests completed.

_ Newfoundland and Labrador: 353 confirmed cases (20 active, 329 resolved, four deaths).

There was one new case Wednesday from 366 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 0.27 per cent. The rate of active cases is 3.83 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there has been 13 new case. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is two.

There have been no deaths reported over the past week. The overall death rate is 0.77 per 100,000 people.

There have been 65,333 tests completed.

_ Prince Edward Island: 84 confirmed cases (13 active, 71 resolved, zero deaths).

There were zero new cases Wednesday from 1,311 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 0.0 per cent. The rate of active cases is 8.28 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 12 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is two.

There have been no deaths reported over the past week. The overall death rate is zero per 100,000 people.

There have been 66,023 tests completed.

_ Nova Scotia: 1,389 confirmed cases (71 active, 1,253 resolved, 65 deaths).

There were six new cases Wednesday from 1,173 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 0.51 per cent. The rate of active cases is 7.31 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 57 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is eight.

There have been no deaths reported over the past week. The overall death rate is 6.69 per 100,000 people.

There have been 156,311 tests completed.

_ New Brunswick: 542 confirmed cases (74 active, 461 resolved, seven deaths).

There was one new case Wednesday from 599 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 0.17 per cent. The rate of active cases is 9.53 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there has been 28 new case. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is four.

There have been no deaths reported over the past week. The overall death rate is 0.9 per 100,000 people.

There have been 106,933 tests completed.

_ Quebec: 156,468 confirmed cases (15,427 active, 133,692 resolved, 7,349 deaths).

There were 1,728 new cases Wednesday from 10,169 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 17 per cent. The rate of active cases is 181.82 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 11,406 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 1,629.

There were 36 new reported deaths Wednesday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 224 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is 32. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is 0.38 per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 86.61 per 100,000 people.

There have been 2,280,376 tests completed.

_ Ontario: 132,800 confirmed cases (16,089 active, 112,875 resolved, 3,836 deaths).

There were 1,890 new cases Wednesday from 46,958 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 4.0 per cent. The rate of active cases is 110.45 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 12,878 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 1,840.

There were 28 new reported deaths Wednesday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 138 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is 20. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is 0.14 per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 26.33 per 100,000 people.

There have been 6,494,774 tests completed.

_ Manitoba: 19,655 confirmed cases (5,348 active, 13,869 resolved, 438 deaths).

There were 279 new cases Wednesday from 2,296 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 12 per cent. The rate of active cases is 390.52 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 2,271 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 324.

There were 18 new reported deaths Wednesday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 96 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is 14. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is one per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 31.98 per 100,000 people.

There have been 369,004 tests completed.

_ Saskatchewan: 10,899 confirmed cases (4,707 active, 6,121 resolved, 71 deaths).

There were 302 new cases Wednesday from 1,240 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 24 per cent. The rate of active cases is 400.78 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 1,917 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 274.

There were five new reported deaths Wednesday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 18 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is three. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is 0.22 per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 6.05 per 100,000 people.

There have been 275,704 tests completed.

_ Alberta: 73,488 confirmed cases (20,199 active, 52,636 resolved, 653 deaths).

There were 1,460 new cases Wednesday from 6,551 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 22 per cent. The rate of active cases is 462.08 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 12,319 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 1,760.

There were 13 new reported deaths Wednesday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 92 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is 13. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is 0.3 per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 14.94 per 100,000 people.

There have been 1,541,334 tests completed.

_ British Columbia: 39,337 confirmed cases (10,330 active, 28,448 resolved, 559 deaths).

There were 619 new cases Wednesday from 7,723 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 8.0 per cent. The rate of active cases is 203.69 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 4,609 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is 658.

There were 16 new reported deaths Wednesday. Over the past seven days there have been a total of 90 new reported deaths. The seven-day rolling average of new reported deaths is 13. The seven-day rolling average of the death rate is 0.25 per 100,000 people. The overall death rate is 11.02 per 100,000 people.

There have been 853,460 tests completed.

_ Yukon: 58 confirmed cases (10 active, 47 resolved, one deaths).

There were zero new cases Wednesday from 66 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 0.0 per cent. The rate of active cases is 24.48 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of nine new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is one.

There have been no deaths reported over the past week. The overall death rate is 2.45 per 100,000 people.

There have been 5,673 tests completed.

_ Northwest Territories: 15 confirmed cases (zero active, 15 resolved, zero deaths).

There were zero new cases Wednesday from 62 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 0.0 per cent. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of zero new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is zero.

There have been no deaths reported over the past week. The overall death rate is zero per 100,000 people.

There have been 6,691 tests completed.

_ Nunavut: 229 confirmed cases (48 active, 181 resolved, zero deaths).

There were nine new cases Wednesday from 65 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 14 per cent. The rate of active cases is 123.78 per 100,000 people. Over the past seven days, there have been a total of 36 new cases. The seven-day rolling average of new cases is five.

There have been no deaths reported over the past week. The overall death rate is zero per 100,000 people.

There have been 4,714 tests completed.

8:30 p.m.: Canada has become the third country in the world to sign off on a vaccine made by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE, setting the stage for vaccination to begin here. The dose is already approved for emergency use in the U.K. and Bahrain.

In announcing that it had given the dose the green light, Health Canada also released a significant amount of information about why the decision had been made, as well as more details on who should take the vaccine and how.

Read the full story by Toronto Star reporter Alex Boyd here:

8:11 p.m.: A hospital in Midland, Ont., has postponed all scheduled non-urgent and elective surgeries as it deals with a COVID-19 outbreak that has expanded to all inpatient units.

The Georgian Bay General Hospital says its intensive care unit is included in the areas affected by the outbreak.

It says there are two inpatient cases and 13 staff cases linked to the outbreak so far.

The outbreak was initially declared at one unit last Friday.

Read the full story here:

8:05 p.m.: The first shipment of a newly-approved COVID-19 vaccine destined for Canada departs Friday on a journey now more perilous because of President Donald Trump’s executive order declaring vaccines should go to Americans first.

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

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

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

Read the full story here:

8:00 p.m.: Dr. Shelley Deeks, the whistleblower who revealed the province when establishing its colour-coded COVID-19 plan, is leaving her job with Public Health Ontario, the agency announced Wednesday.

PHO was created in 2007 as an independent public health agency to address failures during SARS. Deeks is currently its chief health protection officer in charge of leading PHO’s pandemic response and serves on the province’s public health measures table, a key expert group that advises on restrictions and lockdown measures.

Deeks, who has worked with PHO since 2009, is moving to Nova Scotia to pursue “an exciting career opportunity” as that province’s new medical officer of health for surveillance, PHO spokesperson Janet Wong said in an email.

Her last day with PHO will be Jan. 8.

Read the full story here:

7:48 p.m.: The federal government says the largest mass immunization effort in Canadian history could begin as early as next week. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Ottawa expects to receive up to 249,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and German partner BioNTech. Health Canada has approved its use. The second vaccine in line for approval in Canada is from Moderna. The Canadian military will have a role to play in vaccine distribution. Various provinces have started spelling out their plans as well. Here’s a look at what they’ve said so far:

Newfoundland and Labrador

Premier Andrew Furey says he anticipates receiving 1,950 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine at the St. John’s receiving site next week.

The announcement comes as Furey told reporters Monday that the province would remain outside of the Atlantic “bubble,” meaning all visitors to the province must self-isolate for 14 days, regardless of whether they come from Atlantic Canada.

The province announced no new cases on Monday, but the town of Harbour Breton was on high alert as officials were still trying to chase down the source of an infection announced in the region over the weekend.

Furey says the province expects another shipment of the vaccine later in the month.

Prince Edward Island

Health officials on Prince Edward Island say they are ready to administer the COVID-19 vaccine when the first shipment of the vaccine arrives next week.

Chief medical officer of health Dr. Heather Morrison says the province plans to begin by administering the Pfizer vaccine to priority groups, including residents and staff of long-term care homes, health-care workers and adults in Indigenous communities.

Morrison says she expects to receive 1,950 doses in the first shipment, and the clinic will have to be held at the storage location because the Pfizer vaccine must be kept frozen.

She says the province will be able to start administering the doses the day after the vaccine arrives.

New Brunswick

New Brunswick health officials say the province expects to receive up to 1,950 doses of the Pfizer vaccine around Dec. 14 as part of the first of two shipments that may occur this month.

The province is working to identify the priority groups that will receive the vaccine in the first phase of vaccinations, based on recommendations from the federal government.

Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia’s chief medical officer of health says the province will receive 1,950 doses of Pfizer’s vaccine for an initial test run beginning Tuesday.

Dr. Robert Strang says the first doses will be used to immunize front-line health workers in the Halifax area who are most directly involved in the pandemic response.

Strang says because the vaccine has specific handling requirements, Pfizer has stipulated that the initial round of immunizations take place near where the doses are stored.

Nova Scotia has one ultralow-temperature freezer to store the vaccine at the tertiary care teaching complex at the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre.

Strang says the province is getting another freezer through Ottawa that will operate out of a central depot for vaccines at the public health office in Halifax. The province is also looking at securing freezers from the private sector.

Quebec

Quebec says the first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine could be administered in the province as early as next week.

Health Minister Christian Dube says the province plans to give its first doses of the Pfizer vaccine to about 2,000 people in long-term care homes.

In a technical briefing before a Monday news conference, public health experts said residents of long-term care homes and health-care workers would have first priority to receive the vaccine.

The groups next in line are people living in private seniors residences, followed by residents of isolated communities and then anyone aged 80 and over.

Dube says Quebec also expects to receive enough Pfizer vaccines between Dec. 21 and Jan. 4 to vaccinate 22,000 to 28,000 people.

It comes as Premier Francois Legault said Tuesday that his government isn’t ruling out implementing further restrictions.

Ontario

Premier Doug Ford says vulnerable seniors, their caregivers and health-care workers will be among the first to receive a vaccine.

Adults in Indigenous communities, residents of retirement homes and recipients of chronic home health-care will also be considered priority groups.

But it may be April before the shots are widely available to others.

Retired general Rick Hillier, who is leading Ontario’s vaccine task force, says the province should be able to vaccinate 1.2 million people during the first three months of 2021.

The province says it will also be prioritizing the rollout of the vaccine in regions with the highest rates of COVID-19 infection.

Health Minister Christine Elliott says while the vaccine is not mandatory, people who do not get the shot may face travel restrictions or may not be able to access some communal spaces.

Elliott says the province will provide proof of immunization to everyone who receives a dose

Manitoba

Premier Brian Pallister says some 900 health-care workers in critical care units will be the first to receive the vaccine after doses start to arrive as early as next week.

As more shipments come in, priority will be given to other health-care workers, seniors and Indigenous people.

The province hopes to vaccinate more than 100,000 people by March — that’s roughly seven per cent of Manitoba’s population.

Officials say they’ve been setting up a large-scale “supersite” to deliver the vaccine. The first freezer able to store the Pfizer vaccine at low temperatures has been delivered and installed, with another four on the way.

The province says the vaccine will become more widely available at a larger number of sites, similar to a conventional vaccination campaign, such as the annual flu shot.

Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan plans to start immunizing critical health-care workers against COVID-19 in a pilot project next week.

Premier Scott Moe says the province expects to receive 1,950 doses of Pfizer’s vaccine by Tuesday. A pilot vaccination program at the Regina General Hospital will give the vaccine to health-care workers in intensive and emergency care, COVID-19 units and those working in testing and assessment centres.

The first official stage of Saskatchewan’s vaccination program will be in late December when the province receives more doses.

It will target more health-care workers, staff and residents in long-term care, seniors over 80 and people in remote areas who are at least 50.

Some 202,052 doses of the Pfizer vaccine are expected to arrive within the first quarter of next year, and there are to be 10,725 weekly allocations.

Moe says vaccinations for the general population is expected to begin in April.

Alberta

Alberta Health Minister Tyler Shandro says the first Pfizer vaccinations will begin Dec. 16, focusing on two hospitals in Edmonton and two in Calgary.

There will be 3,900 doses going to intensive care doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists and care-home workers.

Shandro says the vaccine must be administered at its delivery site, so it can’t go to care homes.

The second batch is expected later this month.

The province says it eventually plans to roll out the vaccine from 30 different locations.

British Columbia

British Columbia’s provincial health officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry, says because the Pfizer vaccine needs to be stored at ultracold temperatures, officials will bring people to the vaccine instead of the vaccine to the people.

Henry says workers in long-term care facilities will be the first to get the doses starting next week.

She expects about 400,000 residents to be vaccinated by March.

Those recipients are to be health-care workers, people over 80, vulnerable populations, and front-line workers, including teachers and grocery workers.

Nunavut

Nunavut’s chief public health officer says the territory will look to get the Moderna vaccine once it’s available in Canada.

Dr. Michael Patterson, says Moderna’s vaccine is preferred because Pfizer’s requires cold storage and shipping would be too difficult in Nunavut.

Patterson says Iqaluit is the only community where it would be possible to store the Pfizer vaccine.

Patterson says the territory’s focus for vaccine rollout will be higher risk groups, such as elders. He says the rollout depends on how many doses Nunavut gets, which is still unknown.

Lorne Kusugak, Nunavut’s health minister, says he’s been lobbying the federal government to make Nunavut a high priority to receive COVID-19 vaccines.

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Yukon

Premier Sandy Silver says he is meeting with the Prime Minister and his fellow premiers later this week to discuss plans for vaccine rollout.

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

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

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

Silver says 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.

7:46 p.m.: Booze to go is officially here to stay in Ontario.

As first reported by the on Oct. 7, the Progressive Conservative government is making permanent a temporary pandemic measure allowing restaurants and bars to sell takeout beer, wine, and spirits.

Attorney General Doug Downey said Wednesday the long-anticipated move is designed to help businesses that have been struggling in the midst of the pandemic.

“Ontario’s vibrant hospitality sector and its workers have been hard hit by COVID-19 in every community across our province,” said Downey.

Read more here:

7:30 p.m.: Thorncliffe Park Public School in Toronto will reopen on Dec. 14. The school was earlier closed until Wednesday over COVID-19 cases at the school. The Toronto District School Board Wednesday evening that Toronto Public Health is still investigating.

7:20 p.m.: Alberta is to start distributing the COVID-19 vaccine next week to front-line health workers and caregivers.

Health Minister Tyler Shandro says the first round of the vaccine will be administered on Dec. 16.

The 3,900 doses will be given to intensive care unit doctors and nurses, respiratory therapists and long-term care workers.

7:00 p.m.: British Columbia’s top doctor says health-care workers in long-term care facilities and intensive care units will be the first to be immunized against COVID-19 with the Pfizer vaccine starting next week.

Dr. Bonnie Henry says immunizations will happen at two clinics in the Vancouver Coastal Health and Fraser Health regions, before eventually expanding to 30 sites as part of a process that will ramp up as more doses and vaccines become available.

Up to 400,000 B.C. residents can get a shot in the arm by the end of March.

Henry says prioritizing those who work at care homes will protect the elderly, who can’t travel to sites where the vaccine must be administered because it needs to be kept at a very cold temperature.

6:50 p.m.: The TTC is planning to reduce service from previously scheduled levels and continue operating on the pandemic footing it adopted in 2020 as it heads into its second calendar year grappling with the COVID-19 crisis.

In a report on its annual service plan released Wednesday, the TTC proposed a three-per-cent cut to regular operating hours in 2021 compared to service it had budgeted for in 2020. The reduction would save about $20.5 million.

But transit agency staff note in the report that although the planned 2021 service offering is less than what the TTC budgeted for this year, it would be a continuation of operations. That’s because the TTC started cutting back from 2020 budgeted service hours in the spring once the crisis hit and demand for transit plummeted.

Read more by Toronto Star transportation reporter Ben Spurr here:

6:45 p.m. York Region residents have received a stark warning: the region’s three local hospitals have reached a “tipping point” in the battle against .

CEOs from Mackenzie Health, Markham Stouffville and Southlake Regional hospitals sent out a joint statement Tuesday afternoon raising the alarm over significant increases in the number of patients being admitted for COVID-19.

“We are concerned about how this may impact access to care like scheduled surgeries for all patients across our communities,” the statement said.

The CEOs are calling on the entire community to step up to slow the spread.

Read the full story by YorkRegion.com reporter Kim Zarzour here:

6:37 p.m.: Ontario is about to examine the role that proof of COVID-19 vaccination or “immunity passports” will play in society as new daily cases remain near record levels.

With the first shots expected soon and the province reporting 1,890 more infections Wednesday, Premier Doug Ford’s government is looking at providing “tech-based” certificates in addition to alternatives for people who prefer not to keep such records on devices such as smart phones.

Following a warning from Health Minister Christine Elliott that “there may be some restrictions…placed on people that don’t have vaccinations,” her office said in a statement that a dialogue is beginning on what consensus will develop given the highly contagious nature of the virus.

Read the full story by Toronto Star reporter Rob Ferguson here:

6:32 p.m.: Quebec Premier Francois Legault said Wednesday he has asked the province’s police forcesas the number of new cases in the province remains high.

Speaking to reporters in Quebec City, the premier said he wants to “send a clear message” to what he described as a small minority of Quebecers who are putting the rest of the public’s health at risk.

“We cannot allow a minority of people to put the majority at risk,” he said.

While Legault acknowledged that police in Quebec have issued thousands of tickets since the end of November, he said he wanted to “crank the number” of tickets up.

6:20 p.m.: Alberta Premier Jason Kenney is rejecting criticism he waited too long to bring in tighter COVID-19 measures as “Alberta bashing.”

The comment came in a radio interview Wednesday with Edmonton’s CHED radio station. Kenney lauded Alberta’s pandemic response in the spring, including when Edmonton held the National Hockey League playoffs in an isolation “bubble.”

That prompted host Shaye Ganam to interject: “Premier Kenney, with all due respect, you’re talking about things that happened several months ago, and we’re in a drastically different situation now.

“Things are far, far worse when you talk about our record in terms of pandemic response. It’s among the worst, especially in Canada.”

Kenney countered: “I don’t accept the Alberta bashing that is going on here.”

The premier said not all people who make up Alberta’s high COVID-19 case counts end up getting sick. He said comparable jurisdictions are facing similar rates and the key metric is death rates.

Read the full story here:

6 p.m.: The Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation on the province to announce a two-week extended break after the holidays (with virtual learning) and more funding for asymptomatic testing in all TDSB schools. The organization cited more time needed for teachers to prepare for the new year.

Leslie Wolfe, head of the local organization, said this could give parents time to see if their children develop symptoms after Christmas and New Years.

5:35 p.m.: A public sector union is over the company’s safety record during the COVID-19 pandemic, saying the fund should “pull out of the business of long-term care” altogether.

The Public Service Alliance of Canada, which represents 140,000 public sector pension plan members, first said in May that for-profit long-term care homes run by Revera should no longer be wholly owned by Public Sector Pension Investment, the Crown corporation managing public servants’ pensions. Instead, the union says the homes should be managed by the public sector in order to protect both residents and pension funds.

3 p.m. (updated): The TTC and Metrolinx are breaking from an annual tradition of offering free rides on New Year’s Eve in an effort to curb the spread of COVID-19.

TTC buses and trains will not be offering free service on New Year’s Eve for the first time since 2013, TTC spokesperson Stuart Green said Wednesday.

“In discussions with our sponsor, Corby Spirit and Wine, and given current restrictions and closures, it was not responsible to encourage partying,” Green wrote in an email to the Star.

The free service, to discourage drinking and driving, was offered in partnership with a sponsor in previous years, beginning at 7 p.m. and ending at 7 p.m. on New Year’s Day. In 2018, more than 250,000 took advantage of the free ride, .

Regular service will continue.

Metrolinx spokesperson Matt Llewellyn also confirmed to the Star that it will not be offering free rides on GO Transit and UP Express on New Year’s Eve. In previous years, GO offered free service from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. on Jan. 1.

“Additionally, on New Year’s Eve, we will not be running extra late-night service on GO like we did in previous years and will run our regular weekday service,” Llewellyn said in an email.

Llewellyn also said GO transit will be running on a regular schedule except for Christmas and New Year’s Day, where it will run on a Sunday schedule.

2:50 p.m.: Saskatchewan reported 302 new cases Wednesday and five additional COVID-19 deaths — all individuals in their 80s. There were 4,707 active cases and 140 people were in hospital, 27 of them in intensive care.

2:45 p.m.: Test results from five mink samples taken from a farm in British Columbia’s Fraser Valley have.

The provincial Ministry of Agriculture says the samples were gathered after several workers on the farm tested positive for the illness.

B.C.’s chief veterinarian has placed the farm under quarantine, prohibiting the movement of animals and materials from the property.

The ministry says a plan is in place to feed and care for the mink during the outbreak, which was declared on Monday when workers tested positive.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said that was concerning because transmissions between humans and mink have occurred in other countries and there’s a potential for mutations of the virus.

2:25 p.m. (updated): Toronto’s top doctor reports that there are 553 new cases in the city.

Dr. Eileen de Villa told reporters that there are 220 patients in the hospital, with 53 of them in the ICU.

Of the 553 new cases today, 70 per cent of new infections were spread roughly evenly between people ages 20 and 59, de Villa said.

She said the percentage positivity is highest among those ages 14-17, at 11.6 per cent, compared to nine per cent among those 18-23.

De Villa added that while the number of daily infections remains unacceptably high, the fact that the numbers have settled somewhat could be a sign that the current restrictions are having an impact.

2:10 p.m.: The government of the Northwest Territories says it has .

The N.W.T.’s chief public health officer, Dr. Kami Kondola, says this means there is likely an undetected case of COVID-19 in the capital.

The virus was detected through a wastewater monitoring program, which analyzed samples taken between Nov. 30 and Dec. 2.

As a result, the government is asking anyone self-isolating in Yellowknife since Nov. 30 to get a COVID-19 test, even if they don’t have symptoms.

1:55 p.m.: Manitoba health officials are reporting 280 new COVID-19 cases and 18 additional deaths.

The latter is one shy of the daily record to date.

The government says it will start receiving vaccines as early as next week, and will first target some 900 front-line health care workers.

The province hopes to have more than 200,000 doses by March.

1:55 p.m.: Public health officials in Newfoundland and Labrador have concluded there was an undetected positive case of COVID-19 in the province.

Officials say the source of an infection announced over the weekend still cannot be traced, and it’s now considered non-epidemiologically linked.

Chief medical officer of health Dr. Janice Fitzgerald says that means someone was sick and didn’t know it, or that they perhaps left the province.

The tiny town of Harbour Breton has been in a state of partial lockdown since Sunday as officials tried to chase down the source of the infection, and Fitzgerald says it will stay that way until the risk of transmission abates.

The province reported one new case of COVID-19 Wednesday, and officials say the infection is related to travel.

Newfoundland and Labrador is set to receive a shipment of 1,950 doses of the Pfizer vaccine next week and officials say they’re working to identify who will get the shots.

1:22 p.m. The head of the airport in Sydney, N.S., says

Mike MacKinnon, CEO of J.A. McCurdy Sydney Airport, says the airport has been struggling with maintaining traffic levels since the pandemic began.

The airline announced that effective Jan. 11, it would be suspending all service to Sydney and Saint John, N.B., until further notice.

MacKinnon says the airport has now lost all connectivity, hindering families, rotational workers and businesses in Cape Breton, though he hopes it will be able to bounce back after a winter closure.

This isn’t the first blow Sydney’s airport has faced, as Air Canada had previously suspended flights from Sydney to Halifax.

WestJet, the only other airline servicing the airport, suspended its flights in October as part of cuts that also affected Moncton, N.B., Fredericton, Charlottetown and St. John’s, N.L.

1:05 p.m. Canada has become the second country in the world to sign off of the COVID-19 vaccine made by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE, meaning distribution can now begin here.

Along with the , Health Canada released a bunch of information about the dose, including who the government is recommending take it and how.

12:25 p.m.: Public health officials in New Brunswick are reporting one new case of COVID-19.

They say the case is related to travel and involves a person in their 30s in the Saint John area who is self-isolating.

There have been seven deaths in the province since the beginning of the pandemic, and the number of active cases is 74.

Three patients are hospitalized and are in intensive care.

12:16 p.m. The Saskatchewan government says it’s ready to begin immunizing critical health-care workers against COVID-19 starting next week.

The Ministry of Health says it expects to receive 1,950 doses of Pfizer’s vaccine by Tuesday.

The effort will begin with a pilot vaccination program at the Regina General Hospital for health-care workers in intensive and emergency care, COVID-19 units and testing and assessment centres.

The province plans to move into its first official stage of its vaccination program in late December as it receives more doses.

12:10 p.m.: While parents and teachers of elementary and secondary schools may be anticipating, and even planning for, a post-vacation lockdown, there has been no official word on an extended break — or a return-to-school strategy.

Toronto Public Health continues to push safety protocols already in place. School boards keep urging families to stay in their bubbles. And while universities in Ontario as well as other provinces, including Alberta, have long ago announced extended winter breaks or pivots to online learning, Ontario’s education minister remains mum on the issue.

11:50 a.m.: Health Canada announced Wednesday it has approved the first COVID-19 vaccine for distribution and use in Canada, a historic offensive move to defeat the coronavirus pandemic that has taken nearly 13,000 Canadian lives and continues to threaten the lives of millions around the world.

The landmark decision gives the green light to a national vaccination campaign that will launch next week as soon as doses produced by Pfizer/BioNTech, a joint U.S.-German effort, arrive in Canada.

It comes a week after Britain became the first country to approve the same vaccine — the first to complete extensive clinical trials — as safe and effective against the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, that causes COVID-19.

11:24 a.m.: Starting Monday, Canada will accept permanent-resident applications from asylum-seekers who have worked on the frontlines of this country’s health-sector during the COVID-19 pandemic.

News of came almost four months after Ottawa initially announced the Guardian Angels pathway on Aug. 14 to honour the contributions of refugee claimants in risking their lives to care for Canadians during the crisis.

“We recognize the dedication of the many asylum-seekers who have raised their hand to serve as we live through a unique and unprecedented situation,” Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino said in a statement Wednesday.

11:15 a.m.: Quebec is reporting 1,728 new cases of COVID-19 as well as 37 more deaths.

Seven of the deaths occurred in the last 24 hours, 24 occurred between Dec. 2 and Dec. 7 and the rest were at earlier or unknown dates.

The province says hospitalizations increased by nine to 844, and the number of people in intensive care increased by seven, to 121.

One death that was previously attributed to COVID-19 was withdrawn from the total, for a sum of 7,349 deaths and 156,468 cases since the pandemic began.

11:02 a.m.: Nova Scotia is reporting six new cases of COVID-19 today.

The number of active cases is now 71, down from 78 on Tuesday.

All of the new cases are in the Halifax area.

Four of the cases are close contacts of previously reported cases, while one is related to travel outside of Atlantic Canada and the other case is under investigation.

11 a.m.: Hospitals in Ontario’s York Region

A joint statement from the CEOs of Mackenzie Health, Markham Stouffville Hospital and Southlake Regional Health Centre highlighted a “significant increase” in admissions due to the novel coronavirus in recent weeks.

The group said they were concerned that the trend could impact access to other health care, like scheduled surgeries, and called on residents to wear masks in public and forgo gathering over the holidays in order to protect the community.

York Region is currently in the red level of the province’s pandemic response framework — the strictest public health measures short of a lockdown.

11 a.m.: Ontario is reporting an additional 207 cases in public schools across the province, bringing the total in the last two weeks to 1,616 and 5,919 overall since school began.

, the province reported 174 more students were infected for a total of 1,330 in the last two weeks; since school began there have been an overall total of 3,966.

The data shows there are 33 more staff members infected for a total of 285 the last two weeks — and an overall total of 865.

There are 866 schools with a reported case, which is just under 18 per cent of the 4,828 public schools in Ontario.

Eleven schools are closed because of an outbreak. The data doesn’t indicate where they are.

Three schools, all around Thorncliffe Park, in Toronto — , and , the site of Ontario’s voluntary mass asymptomatic testing program.

There is a lag between the daily provincial data at 10:30 a.m. and news reports about infections in schools. The provincial data on Wednesday is current as of 2 p.m. Tuesday. It doesn’t indicate where the place of transmission occurred.

The Toronto District School Board updates its information on current COVID-19 cases throughout . As of 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, there were 433 students infected, 88 staff and 601 resolved cases.

The Toronto Catholic District School Board also updates its information . As of 9 a.m. Wednesday, there were 79 schools with at least one active case. There are 114 active student cases and 17 staff.

Epidemiologists that the rising numbers in the schools aren’t a surprise, and that the cases will be proportionate to the amount of COVID that is in the community.

10:47 a.m.: A local hospital is helping staff at a long-term care home in Whitby, Ont., after 162 cases of COVID-19 were reported at the facility.

An inspection of the Sunnycrest Nursing Home on Nov. 29 found that the facility was operating with less than 50 per cent of regular staff, and care and medications were delayed as a result.

Staff also told the inspector that there was not enough time to maintain the facility’s stock of personal protective equipment that was locked in the management’s office.

The province’s Ministry of Long-Term Care approved a voluntary management agreement last week, after the inspection report, that allows the Lakeridge Health hospital to support the nursing home.

Durham Region’s public health unit says that there have been 162 total cases of the novel coronavirus linked to Sunnycrest since Nov. 23.

The region’s most recent data shows that of those cases, 97 people are in isolation, 43 have been resolved, 11 have been hospitalized, and 11 are dead.

Read the full story here:

10:35 a.m. A senior official with the Saskatchewan Health Authority says the province’s health-care system won’t be able to cope if the recent growth in COVID-19 cases continues.

Dr. Julie Kryzanowski’s presentation to more than 100 physicians at a virtual town hall last week has been posted online.

She told the town hall that in the last week officials had recorded exponential growth in infections, outbreaks, hospitalizations and deaths.

“We do know that with this rate of growth it’s not sustainable for our health system and continues to stress our capacity,” doctors heard, hours after the health authority announced it was diverting up to 600 staff to respond to the surge.

For almost three weeks, masks have been mandatory in indoor public spaces provincewide and no more than five visitors have been allowed to gather inside a home.

10:14 a.m. (updated): Ontario is reporting 1,890 new cases of COVID-19 today, and 28 new deaths due to the virus.

Health Minister Christine Elliott says 517 cases are in Toronto, 471 in Peel Region and 187 in York Region.

The province says it has conducted 48,546 tests since the last daily report.

In total, 811 people are hospitalized in Ontario due to COVID-19, including 221 in intensive care.

The province also says 129 people are on ventilators in hospital.

The latest figures bring the total of COVID-19 cases in Ontario to 132,800, with 3,836 deaths, and 112,875 cases resolved.

10:07 a.m. The Bank of Canada is .

The central bank says it will hold the policy interest rate at the effective lower bound until economic slack is absorbed so that the two per cent inflation target is sustainably achieved.

9:30 a.m. Google Canada says the U.S. election was the top trending search by Canadians on its platform this year.

The company’s list of the top trending searches, released Wednesday, says “US election” was the most-searched term by Canadians, followed by “coronavirus.”

Basketball player Kobe Bryant, who died in January, was the third trending search, followed by “Zoom” and “Raptors.”

The terms “CERB” — for Canada Emergency Response Benefit — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, and American actor Naya Rivera who died this summer were also among the top 10.

U.S. politics rounded off the list, with “Joe Biden” and “Trump vs. Biden” taking the final two spots.

Air Canada stock, the April Nova Scotia shooting, “CERB extension,” and “Justin Trudeau press conference” were among the top trending Canadian news items.

9:25 a.m. Ontario will give people who complete their COVID-19 shots proof of vaccination in case they need it to travel, to work or to go to the movies, Health Minister Christine Elliott says.

With the first vaccine shipment expected this month, Elliott promised a new public communications campaign to educate people on all aspects of the vaccinations, including why it’s important to get them and potential side effects.

There will also be a system to keep track of who gets the first primer shot to make sure they return for the booster a few weeks later.

While the vaccine will be voluntary, Elliott said Ontarians should be aware it may become a requirement for travel on airplanes, employment and other activities where there is close contact with others, given the highly contagious nature of the virus.

9:10 a.m. (updated) British regulators shouldn’t receive the new Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine as they investigate two adverse reactions that occurred on the first day of the country’s mass vaccination program.

The U.K.’s Medical and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency is looking into whether the reactions were linked to the vaccine. The two people affected were staff members with the National Health Service who had a history of allergies, and both are recovering. Authorities have not specified what their reactions were.

In the meantime, the regulator has issued the warning for anyone who has had a significant allergic reaction to a vaccine, medicine or food. That includes anyone who has been told to carry an adrenaline shot or others who have had potentially fatal allergic reactions.

“As is common with new vaccines the MHRA have advised on a precautionary basis that people with a significant history of allergic reactions do not receive this vaccination after two people with a history of significant allergic reactions responded adversely yesterday,’’ Professor Stephen Powis, medical director for the NHS in England, said in a statement. “Both are recovering well.”

The medical regulatory agency also said vaccinations should not be carried out in facilities that don’t have resuscitation equipment.

Pfizer and BioNTech said they were working with investigators “to better understand each case and its causes.’’

9:10 a.m. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s influential sister l for questioning the North’s claim to be coronavirus free and warned of possible consequences.

South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha said over the weekend that it is hard to believe North Korea’s claim that it has had no virus outbreak. She added that the North has not responded to a South Korean offer of co-operation in jointly tackling the pandemic.

Kim Yo Jong, the North Korean leader’s sister, responded in a statement carried by state media.

“It can be seen from the reckless remarks made by her without any consideration of the consequences that she is too eager to further chill the frozen relations between North and South Korea,” Kim said.

“Her real intention is very clear. We will never forget her words and she might have to pay dearly for it,” she said.

The remarks show how sensitive North Korea is to what it considers any outside attempt to tarnish its image as it steps up its efforts to guard against the pandemic and the economic fallout.

9 a.m. One early morning in mid-October, Jonathan and Patricia Liedy woke their three daughters before dawn, loaded them into the car they’d packed the night before and set out from the north Florida home they had barely left in months.

Destination? A medical facility three hours away in Georgia.

The couple had appointments that would give them membership in a small worldwide club that has played a critical role in paving the way for a vaccine. They volunteered to be injected with an experimental vaccine to make sure it was safe for the world.

“I mean, that really is our philosophy of life,” Patricia, 36, said, speaking via Zoom from their home in Tallahassee.

“Instead of sitting there, hoping that someone will do something, get up and be the person to do something. We can’t always do that, but this time we could.”

8:50 a.m. Clothing retailer Roots reported its third-quarter profit rose compared with a year ago as the company cut costs.

Roots says it earned $10.3 million or 24 cents per diluted share for the quarter ended Oct. 31 compared with a profit of nearly $2 million or five cents per diluted share a year earlier.

Sales totalled $72.9 million, down from nearly $86.4 million in the same quarter last year.

The company says the drop in sales was predominantly due to a decrease in store traffic because of the pandemic, partially offset by a 40 per cent increase in online sales.

8:11 a.m. Marc Garneau Collegiate Institute as of Wednesday, as advised by Toronto Public Health, Toronto District School Board said in a tweet on Tuesday.

This is the third TDSB school to declare a COVID-19 outbreak and shut down.

According to the, 14 new student cases were confirmed at Marc Garneau CI, as of Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. No staff cases have been reported.

that Fraser Mustard Early Learning Academy in Thorncliffe Park will remain closed to students and staff until Dec. 14.

8:05 a.m. With most restaurants relying on delivery and takeout during the COVID-19 pandemic, more attention has been placed on third-party food ordering apps like Uber Eats, SkipTheDishes and DoorDash.

Recently, Ontario announced that it will be in areas where indoor dining is banned and a plan for Skip the Dishes to deliver alcohol from the LCBO was shelved after being from those in the restaurant and bar business.

It’s also been reported that many of the food delivery apps (though they ), of their revenue, and the people who make the deliveries , so what could be done to make it sustainable for everyone?

8 a.m. Dollarama Inc. as it raised its dividend and reported its third-quarter profit rose compared with a year ago.

Full-time employees will receive $300, while part-time workers will receive $200.

The one-time payment comes as the retailer raised its quarterly dividend to 4.7 cents per share, up from 4.4 cents.

Dollarama earned $161.9 million or 52 cents per diluted share for the quarter ended Nov. 1, up from $138.6 million or 44 cents per diluted share in the same quarter last year.

7:50 a.m. After toiling in the fields to secure Canada’s food-supply chain amid a pandemic, migrant farm workers from Trinidad and Tobago have found themselves stuck in this country due to travel restrictions imposed by their homeland.

The workers — estimated to be in the hundreds — are not used to a Canadian December, and their employers’ bunk houses are not necessarily winterized to keep them warm.

Already struggling, many have also been denied Canadian employment insurance benefits because their work permits are tied to specific farm operators, meaning they are not available to work for other employers — a criteria upon which Employment and Social Development Canada insists.

7:30 a.m. A universal basic income would not only lift more than 3.2 million Canadians out of poverty, it would also create hundreds of thousands of new jobs, grow the economy by tens of billions of dollars and eventually pay for itself with increased tax revenues.

That’s according to a by the (CANCEA), which was commissioned by basic income advocacy group to look at the potential economic impacts of Canada implementing two different kinds of basic income programs.

“I think the biggest message coming out of this (report) is that a basic income program can be designed in a sustainable way,” said Paul Smetanin, CANCEA president and one of the report’s authors. “It can be thought of as an investment as opposed to a cost.”

7:20 a.m. Caring for an aging mother with severe dementia is both a physically and emotionally daunting task in the most ordinary of circumstances.

Add a global pandemic, and the task also becomes an extremely lonely one.

This is what Aimee Roberto discovered when she found herself caring for her 82-year-old mother alone in March when the pandemic emerged. Within weeks, Roberto’s mother lost her personal support worker, who usually cared for her a few hours each day. She also lost her private support worker, who had to juggle another job at a long-term-care facility.

Roberto suddenly became the primary caregiver for her mother, while also parenting two teenagers and working a full-time job in human resources.

7:11 a.m. Before her kids go on Christmas break, Lindsay Matheson is going to make sure they bring their indoor shoes home from school.

With cases surging across the province, the weather getting worse — and a holiday season that will undoubtedly find families mixing, mingling and flouting the rules of social distancing — Matheson can’t imagine school will resume as per normal come January.

“This feels exactly like what happened in March,” said Matheson, a Toronto teacher and mom of three, of how students believed they’d return to school at some point after spring break, but never did.

“I kind of expect the same thing is going to happen now. So I’m going to learn from experience.”

6:52 a.m.: “My concerns go right back to the lab in general; with COVID we have issues,” said Alison Myers, pharmacist and owner of Guysborough PharmaChoice, about the notification issued at the end of November describing changes to blood collection services at St. Martha’s Regional, Eastern Memorial, Guysborough Memorial and St. Mary’s Memorial hospitals.

The changes to the booking procedure were outlined on Facebook by the Citizens Supporting Community Health Care Group based in Guysborough. The message informed the public that, “appointments will no longer be able to be booked using the local lab numbers,” and should be made by calling 1-855-867-8821 or online at booking.nshealth.ca.

In addition to this notification, an addendum by a Guysborough Memorial staff member stated, “Lab requisitions will no longer be faxed to any hospitals. You must take the lab requisition with you to the appointment.”

Myers told The Journal that the first issue with lab work is the prolonged wait time.

“It’s three weeks to get an appointment right now, which is a problem in general. Second, is we’ve moved to online or calling (to book lab appointments) which is going to be a nightmare transition for people. And you could end up going to Antigonish, Guysborough or Canso, depending on the timing to get in for your appointment.”

Myers highlighted several concerns about the need for patients to collect and deliver their own lab requestion forms; chief among those that patients who had virtual appointments would be forced to visit an “office that is trying to minimize people in it, to pick up a lab req. [requisition].” While this may be the case, where a lab appointment is quickly available, in other instances, the requisition form can be mailed to the patient.

But in Myers’ experience, these methods are not the only way patients can collect their lab requisition forms; there is another and it’s adding to her workload.

6:46 a.m.: Belgium’s government is under pressure to change its restrictive rules on religious services during the coronavirus crisis after the country’s highest court said the measures impede constitutional conditions on freedom of religion.

The Council of State ruled that, at least temporarily, the government needs to change its measures so that a possible restriction on the collective nature of religious services “is not disproportionate.”

Currently, collective religious services are limited to five people for marriages and 15 for funerals, with no collective Masses allowed.

Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenborne said he would be discussing possible relaxation measures with religious leaders later on Wednesday.

“We are looking for the right balance between freedom of religion and public health,” he said in a statement.

Religious groups had complained that people could go on non-essential shopping sprees but that services continued to face tough restrictions.

The ruling on containing the virus was further compounded Wednesday with new scientific information that the recent steep decline of the main COVID-19 indicators is levelling off.

6:45 a.m.: After a meeting last week with their emergency management officer, the Town of Mulgrave decided to, once again, close council meetings to the public due to concerns about the increase in COVID-19 cases in the province.

During the first wave of the pandemic, council meetings were live streamed via Zoom, but the internet capacity in the Mulgrave Memorial Centre proved inadequate. The most recent council meeting on Dec. 7 was video recorded and will be made available to the public.

Mulgrave CAO Darlene Berthier Sampson told The Journal on Tuesday [Dec. 8] that a work order has been placed with Eastlink for high-speed internet in the building. The installation of the service should be complete in three weeks. Once completed, live streaming of council meetings will resume.

6:36 a.m.: Caring for an aging mother with severe dementia is both a physically and emotionally daunting task in the most ordinary of circumstances.

Add a global pandemic, and the task also becomes an extremely lonely one.

This is what Aimee Roberto discovered when she found herself caring for her 82-year-old mother alone in March when the pandemic emerged. Within weeks, Roberto’s mother lost her personal support worker, who usually cared for her a few hours each day. She also lost her private support worker, who had to juggle another job at a long-term-care facility.

Roberto suddenly became the primary caregiver for her mother, while also parenting two teenagers and working a full-time job in human resources.

“It was very strenuous,” Roberto said. “At a certain point I fell into a little bit of a depression because I felt like I was being pulled in so many different directions.”

“I felt like I was the only one going through all of this.”

5:56 a.m.: U.K. regulators have had two reports of possible allergic reactions from people who took part in the first day of Britain’s mass coronavirus vaccination program against COVID-19.

Dr. June Raine, head of the U.K.’s medical regulatory agency, reported those reactions as she testified Wednesday to a Parliamentary committee. The U.K. began vaccinating elderly people and medical workers with a vaccine developed by American drugmaker Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech on Tuesday, the world’s first rollout of the vaccine.

“We’re looking at two case reports of allergic reactions,’’ she said. “We know from the very extensive clinical trials that this wasn’t a feature.”

“But If we need to strengthen our advice, now that we have had this experience with the vulnerable populations, the groups who have been selected as a priority, we get that advice to the field immediately,” she said.

Raine’s comments came as part of a general discussion of how her agency will continue to monitor people who receive the Pfizer vaccine, which was authorized for emergency use last week.

5:55 a.m.: Double crossed for their co-operation throughout the pandemic, B.C.’s reconfigured Liberal Opposition may take a more aggressive, combative role in the legislature, predicted political analysts.

The first post-election legislative session began on Dec. 7.

“Before COVID, they were combative, but in a clumsy way, trying to be populist,” said former long-time senior Liberal strategist and now-political pundit Martyn Brown. “It’s going to be more combative than it was before. But it will be fair, and it will be smart.”

The fair and smart refers to the change Brown expects under Shirley Bond’s leadership. The MLA for Prince George-Valemount was elected interim leader by her 27 caucus colleagues two days after the former Liberal leader, Andrew Wilkinson, stepped down on Nov. 21.

“Bond will be more sensitive to human needs and more compassionate, but razor sharp in her criticisms,” said Brown.

“These are challenging times in British Columbia,” Bond said last week. “Question period is always going to be a place that has more vigorous debate.”

Premier John Horgan seemed to expect no less. “Shirley and I are mature enough to take these things in stride,” he said when Bond was named interim leader. “I know she’ll be quick to respond to any failings of mine, but I also know she’ll be quick to offer support where it’s required.”

5:54 a.m.: In Regina, the opposition New Democratic Party (NDP) has been pushing the province to commit additional funds for COVID-19 response throughout the length of this fall legislative session. Tuesday, Dec. 8, was no different, with NDP Leader Ryan Meili asking Premier Scott Moe, “Does he agree that it’s time to commit emergency funding to get the increasingly deadly situation and Saskatchewan long term care, under control?”

Meili pointed out, “Nine seniors lost their lives in two different health facilities in a single day.”

Moe said, “First and foremost I would offer my condolences to those families that have lost a family member over the course of the last few days or whether it’s over the course of the entire time that we have been responding to the outbreak of COVID-19 here in Saskatchewan, across the nation, and around the world.”

He said the province acted early to put a number of measures in place with long-term care and health care facilities. This included provided personal protective equipment and limiting visitation. But he acknowledged, “Recently we have had a couple of outbreaks, with the higher numbers that we have in community transmission. And we’re going to continue to work with those facilities individually or as a group to ensure that we’re providing the safest environments possible.”

Meili pointed out some long-term care facilities have four residents to a room, sharing a single bathroom which itself does not have a door. “We called on this government then, as we have so many times, to fix the problems in long-term care to address these unacceptable conditions. They didn’t act. This was predictable. This was preventable. But this government chose not to act. So will the Premier acknowledge today that we have a serious long-term problem in long-term care and that it’s his job to fix it?” Meili asked.

Moe said, “We took action. We took action very early. We took the action based on the advice that was provided by Dr. Shahab with respect to our long-term care homes to ensure that the operating environment that we have is as safe as it can possibly be.”

5:52 a.m.: Will the Canadian Armed Forces be assisting Saskatchewan in dealing with the COVID-19 crisis, as it has done in Quebec and Ontario?

New Democratic Party Leader Ryan Meili asked about that during question period on Dec. 8, saying, “Army reservists, we’ve also learned, are being trained to be deployed in Saskatchewan. The situation here in the province is clearly out of control. And this premier is clearly in over his head.”

“We have the second-highest number of active cases per capita in the entire country. We’ve got new outbreaks in long-term care and hospitals every day. Does the premier recognize he needs some help? And has he been reaching out to the federal government? Will there be military support for health care delivery here in Saskatchewan?”

Premier Scott Moe responded, “My understanding with respect to the military is there is some conversation with respect to the community of Fond-du-Lac and there has been some conversation at the Council of Federation table with the military working with distributing the vaccine from the suppliers ultimately to the provinces.”

He also said, “We have also reassigned a number of people in the Saskatchewan public service to help us with testing and contact tracing, as well have worked closely with the federal government to use some of the resources in people that they have here in the province — specifically I believe Statistics Canada, people that are employed with Statistics Canada — to help us with some of our contact tracing here as well.”

Speaking to reporters, Minister of Government Relations Don McMorris said, “So we know that there is an outbreak in Fond du Lac, and due to the remoteness of the community, it’s just excellent that we can call on the Canadian Rangers, who are local to the community, to then start supplying humanitarian services.”

“It’s not like, you know, our armed forces are flying in. Canadian Rangers are community members that then serve in the Ranger status to provide humanitarian services such as supplying food, getting food for people that are shut in, and firewood, and all those types of things. So it’s not like the some people think, that is more of a military exercise. That’s not what this would be classed as.”

He explained the Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency put in a request on Dec. 4 which was then accepted by the federal government.

5:51 a.m.: Thrift stores in Manitoba are allowed to open again after the province’s top doctor decided that forcing them to close hurt lower-income people.

Dr. Brent Roussin made the announcement Tuesday as he revealed that code-red restrictions imposed in mid-November would continue until Jan. 8.

Charlotte Mctavish, the general manager of Goodwill Industries, welcomed the news.

She said the Goodwill’s five Winnipeg thrift shops will open on Monday. Its store in Ashern might open in the new year.

Mctavish agreed with Roussin’s assessment that low-income Manitobans have been disproportionately affected by the closure of thrift stores. While the Goodwill stores have tried to offer curbside pickup options, she knows it’s not available to everyone.

It’s tough to tell someone who needs an inexpensive pair of shoes or cookware, that those aren’t essential items, she said.

Mctavish said employees were consulted before the decision to open was made.

“We wouldn’t ever put them in a situation where they felt unsafe,” she said.

5:50 a.m.: After a rapid surge in COVID-19 cases in Drumheller in late-November, cases are on the decline and the curve is trending down.

On Monday, November 30 Drumheller had 48 active cases, and as of Monday, December 7 the number of active cases had decreased by more than half to 23.

“The small changes we all make have tremendous power,” said Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Deena Hinshaw during her COVID update on Monday.

Drumheller remains on the enhanced status list, despite the decrease in active cases. Communities are considered under enhanced status when there are 10 or more active cases, with an active case rate of 50 cases per capita, or 100,000 population. Drumheller currently has an active case rate of 255 per 100,000 population.

Starland county currently has four active cases, Wheatland County has seven active cases and has been taken off enhanced status. Kneehill County has 12 active cases and remains on enhanced status.

5:48 a.m.: Car maker Honda has temporarily halted production at its plant in England after shipping delays linked to the COVID-19 pandemic and preparations for Brexit left it with a shortage of parts.

The company said it was forced to make the decision because “transport-related” delays left it short of parts. The factory relies on a “just in time” delivery system, in which parts arrive as they are needed for assembly and not stored locally, increasing efficiency.

“The situation is currently being monitored with a view to restart production as soon as possible,” Honda said in a statement.

The disruption of international trade caused by the pandemic is triggering delays as empty containers clog U.K. ports. Stockpiling ahead of Britain’s final departure from the European Union single market are adding to the congestion.

U.K. Major Ports Group, which represents the nation’s container ports, said a recent survey showed the situation was improving, though ports remained “very busy.”

“But just as container congestion didn’t occur overnight there are no instant, magic wand solutions,” CEO Tim Morris said in a statement. “Ports and their supply chain partners will need to continue to work constructively together.”

5:46 a.m.: If there was any confusion as to who can and cannot stay in hotels under the state’s regional stay-at-home order that went into effect Sunday night, California Gov. Gavin Newsom cleared it up Monday morning.

If you want to get away for a leisure stay, forget about it. Overnight lodging is verboten for anyone but essential workers.

In the days since state officials warned last week that much of California was headed for a COVID-19 lockdown reminiscent of the early days of the pandemic, the public, along with the lodging industry, hadn’t been entirely clear on what that meant for those parts of the state where available intensive care unit capacity had fallen below 15 per cent. So far, the Southern California region and San Joaquin Valley have hit that threshold, and several San Francisco Bay Area counties have voluntarily chosen to embrace the order as well.

Newsom elaborated on what the order means for overnight hotel stays: “The protocol the state put out maintains that it is essential only, lodging can be open for essential workers only. Not for tourists, not for leisure and only for those areas that have fallen into those (ICU capacity) categories.”

Mark Ghaly, the state secretary of Health and Human Services, echoed Newsom’s remarks, reiterating that the state is asking the public to “not travel for leisure” because the overarching point of the latest order, he said, is to stay at home. He did, however, note a few exceptions.

“If you need to travel and you must stay overnight in a hotel in any of the regions in California as a result of your work, that is still permitted and we know that it needs to continue to keep our infrastructure moving in California,” Ghaly said. “The other area is for quarantine or isolation. Some communities have brought on hotel rooms to allow people who can’t easily isolate in their homes to have the hotel to be able to do that to effectively to reduce transmission.”

The net effect, said one San Diego hotel industry leader, is “devastation” for local hotels and their employees, who had been looking forward to a slight uptick in business during the holiday season.

5:45 a.m.: Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said Wednesday that U.S. sanctions are making it difficult for Iran to purchase medicine and health supplies from abroad, including COVID-19 vaccines needed to contain the worst outbreak in the Middle East.

President Donald Trump’s administration has imposed crippling sanctions on Iran’s banking sector and its vital oil and gas industry since unilaterally withdrawing the U.S. from Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers in 2018.

While the United States insists that medicines and humanitarian goods are exempt from sanctions, restrictions on trade have made many banks and companies across the world hesitant to do business with Iran, fearing punitive measures from Washington. The country is also cut off from the international banking system, making it difficult to transfer payments.

“Our people should know that for any action we plan to carry out for importing medicine, vaccines and equipment, we should curse Trump a hundred times,” Rouhani was quoted as saying by the official IRNA news agency.

He said even simple transactions to purchase medicine from other countries had become extremely difficult and that it can take “weeks” to transfer funds.

Rouhani said authorities are nevertheless doing what they can to buy vaccines from abroad, hoping to deliver them to high-risk individuals as soon as possible.

Last week, Iran said it is working on its own vaccine, with testing on human patients expected to begin next month. It plans to buy 20 million vaccine doses from abroad, for a population of more than 80 million people.

5:43 a.m.: The United Arab Emirates said Wednesday a Chinese coronavirus vaccine tested in the federation of sheikhdoms is 86 per cent effective, though it released few details.

The UAE, home to Dubai and Abu Dhabi, conducted a trial involving 31,000 volunteers from 125 nations. Volunteers between 18 and 60 years old received two doses of the vaccine over 28 days.

The UAE’s Health and Prevention Ministry announced the results via a statement on the state-run WAM news agency, saying they “have reviewed Sinopharm CNBG’s interim analysis of the Phase III trials.”

“The analysis shows no serious safety concerns,” the statement said.

It wasn’t immediately clear if the announced results included only those taking part in the testing in the UAE or if they also include results from China and elsewhere. The statement described the vaccine as receiving “official registration” without elaborating on what that meant. Emirati officials could not be immediately reached for comment.

The Sinopharm vaccine has been approved for emergency use in a few countries and the company is still conducting late-stage clinical trials in 10 countries. Morocco is gearing up for an ambitious COVID-19 vaccination program, aiming to vaccinate 80 per cent of its adults in an operation starting this month that’s relying initially on the Sinopharm vaccine.

Sinopharm’s shot relies on a tested technology, using a killed virus to deliver the vaccine, similar to how polio immunizations are made. Leading Western competitors use newer, less-proven technology to target the coronavirus’ spike protein using RNA.

Top officials in the UAE, including Dubai’s ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, have publicly receive the shots as part of the vaccine testing.

5:42 a.m.: The influential sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un lambasted South Korea’s foreign minister for questioning the North’s claim to be coronavirus free, warning Wednesday of potential consequences for the comments.

South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha said over the weekend that it’s hard to believe North Korea’s claim that there has been no virus outbreak on its soil. She added that the North has been unresponsive to South Korea’s offer for co-operation to jointly tackle the pandemic.

The North Korean leader’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, responded in a statement carried by state media.

“It can be seen from the reckless remarks made by her without any consideration of the consequences that she is too eager to further chill the frozen relations between North and South Korea,” she said.

“Her real intention is very clear. We will never forget her words and she might have to pay dearly for it,” Kim said.

The remarks show how sensitive North Korea is to what it considers any outside attempt to tarnish its image as its guards against the pandemic and the economic fallout.

Despite its zero-virus case claim, North Korea’s state media have repeatedly said there is a “maximum emergency” anti-epidemic campaign in which it has closed its international borders, flown out diplomats and isolated residents with suspected symptoms.

The North’s border closure with China, it’s biggest trading partner, is wrecking its already fragile economy. The North has admitted it’s facing “multiple crises” due to the pandemic, a spate of natural disasters last summer and persistent U.S.-led sanctions imposed over its nuclear program.

Experts have said a major disease outbreak in North Korea could cause a humanitarian disaster because of its fragile health care system.

5:41 a.m.: The federal government has sued a Los Angeles County telemarketing company that officials said had reaped $7 million by making false promises of work-from-home opportunities to female viewers of Spanish-language television stations, exploiting their economic insecurity — and later, their worries over the coronavirus pandemic.

The company, Moda Latina BZ, made false representations in television ads stating that consumers could make up to $500 a week selling perfume, makeup and other merchandise without leaving home, the Federal Trade Commission said in a lawsuit that was unsealed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles.

The ads typically ran on the Spanish-language networks Telemundo and Univision, during programs including telenovelas, according to the lawsuit, which also named two of the Moda Latina BZ’s executives as defendants. Screen shots of the television ads showed women holding wads of cash.

The commission said that the scheme had begun in March 2017 and had ended in August of this year, five months into a pandemic that has disproportionately affected Hispanic people. In Los Angeles County, where Moda Latina BZ is based, Hispanic residents were more than twice as likely to become infected with the coronavirus than white residents were, according to the latest public health data.

The lawsuit contends that Moda Latina BZ engaged in abusive and telemarketing practices that violated the Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act.

“Seizing on economic insecurity in the community,” the lawsuit said, “defendants lure consumers into purchasing work-at-home business opportunities with the false promise that consumers will earn hundreds of dollars per week reselling brand-name perfumes, makeup, jewelry, designer clothing, fashion accessories and other luxury products.

5:40 a.m.: A passenger on board a Royal Caribbean “cruise to nowhere” has been diagnosed with the coronavirus, prompting the vessel to return early to Singapore on Wednesday.

Royal Caribbean said in a statement that a guest on the Quantum of the Seas ship “tested positive for coronavirus after checking in with our medical team.”

“We identified and isolated all guests and crew who had close contact with this guest, and each of those individuals have subsequently tested negative for the virus,” it said.

The ship returned to port in accordance with government protocols, and will allow guests to leave after a review of contact tracing is completed, it said.

Singapore recently began a “safe cruising” pilot program allowing cruise ships to make round trips to Singapore with no port of call in between. Strict safety measures were imposed, including reducing capacity by half and pre-boarding testing for passengers. Royal Caribbean is one of two operators licensed to run such trips.

The Singapore Straits Times reported that the patient on the Quantum of the Seas was an 83-year-old Singaporean. It said the vessel, which has 1,680 guests and 1,148 crew members on board, returned on the third day of a four-day trip.

Annie Chang, director of cruise at the Singapore Tourism Board, was quoted by the Straits Times as saying that the passenger had tested negative for COVID-19 before boarding. When he reported to the online medical team with diarrhea, he was tested again and found to be positive, she said.

All leisure activities ceased immediately, passengers were asked to stay in their cabins and emergency response plans were activated including immediate isolation of close contacts, contact tracing and deep cleaning of the ship, she added.

Calls and emails to the Singapore Tourism Board went unanswered.

Royal Caribbean said it had worked with the Singapore government to develop a thorough testing and monitoring system.

“That we were able to quickly identify this single case and take immediate action is a sign that the system is working as it was designed to do,” it added.

Wednesday 5:38 a.m.: Some California hospitals are close to reaching their breaking point, prompting Gov. Gavin Newsom to bring in hundreds of hospital staff from outside the state and to prepare to restart emergency hospitals that were created but barely used when the coronavirus surged last spring.

California officials paint a dire picture of overwhelmed hospitals and exhausted health workers as the state records an average of 22,000 new cases a day. After nine months of the pandemic, they recognize about 12 per cent of people who test positive will end up going to the hospital two to three weeks later. At the current rate, that means 2,640 hospitalizations from each day’s new case total.

“We know that we can expect in the upcoming weeks alarming increases in hospitalizations and deaths,” said Barbara Ferrer, health director for Los Angeles County, the state’s largest with 10 million residents.

For some, “the respiratory infection becomes unbearable — they have difficulty breathing and it’s very frightening,” said California Hospital Association president and CEO Carmela Coyle. What starts with a spike in emergency room visits can cascade into jammed hospital beds and ultimately intensive care units.

California’s hospitalizations already are at record levels, and the state has seen a roughly 70 per cent increase in ICU admissions in just two weeks, leaving just 1,700 of the state’s 7,800 ICU beds available.

“That fragile but important system may be overwhelmed,” Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state’s top public health officer, said Tuesday.

‘I feel like I’m in a dark tunnel’: Small business owners are increasingly feeling the mental health impact of lockdown 2.0

Kozeta Izeti was looking forward to a busy December — until she learned Toronto businesses would be going back into lockdown.

“I had tears in my eyes,” the exhausted owner of Kozeta Salon & Spa on Eglinton Avenue West said. Her first thought was: “Now what?”

The holiday shopping season is normally one of her busiest times of year and Izeti was hoping to recoup some of the profits she lost this year, especially during the initial COVID-19 lockdown in the spring.

Now she shares feelings of frustration with other small business owners told they are not essential while the big box stores are allowed to stay open.

“It’s essential to us,” she said. “I need a roof over my head.”

And she is burned out from months of uncertainty and financial stress.

“I’ve never been so exhausted in my life,” said Izeti, who immigrated from Albania in 2000 and opened her spa 11 years ago. “I feel like I’m in a dark tunnel and I don’t know … when I’m going to see the light to get out of it.”

Many of her staff are newcomers to Canada and she’s worried for them, too.

A new survey by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) found that almost half of small business owners surveyed have suffered from mental health issues because of the pandemic.

Fewer than 30 per cent of small businesses are making their usual sales, said Laura Jones, executive vice-president of the CFIB, and the uncertainty of the pandemic is causing a lot of stress.

“It’s particularly stressful for business owners because their livelihoods are impacted,” she said.

Steve Joordens, a professor of psychology with the University of Toronto Scarborough, said business owners have two levels of stress going on: the health threat, which everyone is facing, and the economic threat to the business that likely supports them and their family.

Not only does this cause sustained anxiety, the helplessness many feel in the face of the pandemic can lead to depression, said Joordens. Both anxiety and depression are health risks in and of themselves: by keeping your body in fight-or-flight mode, anxiety can compromise your immune system over time, and depression can become a suicide risk, he said.

“That feeling of helplessness can kind of sneak people toward more of a depressive mindset, which is even more scary than anxiety,” he said.

Joordens said it’s important that business owners, and anyone experiencing high levels of anxiety due to the pandemic, find a way to take a break from the day-to-day.

Of course, that’s easier said than done.

Forty-three per cent of small business owners surveyed by the CFIB said they are working significantly longer hours than usual. Jones said this is for a variety of reasons: some may be filling in for staff who are sick, or can’t afford the level of staffing they need. Many have been working extra hours to launch and maintain e-commerce, and are also taking more time to clean thanks to pandemic protocols.

The end of the pandemic “can’t come fast enough,” said Jones — business owners are just trying to hold on long enough to make it out the other side.

While there are several programs in place to help small business owners weather the financial difficulties caused by the pandemic, including federal subsidies and support from the province, there are still gaps that need to be addressed, said Jones.

A coalition of around 50 retailers, including large companies such as Ikea and Hudson’s Bay, has asked the province in an open letter to let retailers reopen, arguing that the current restrictions are just pushing shoppers to other stores instead of lowering risk.

On Tuesday in response to the letter, Toronto Mayor John Tory acknowledged the frustration of small business owners watching as big box stores have largely been able to stay open if they carry essential items.

“We know it has a horrific impact on the small independent retailers,” he said. “I’m meeting today with some of the small business people to listen to them.”

He said any change to the lockdown “won’t be a political decision, it will be a public health decision.”

With files from The Canadian Press

Rosa Saba is a Calgary-based business reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Midland businesses benefitting from shop local campaigns

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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