Stevenson Memorial Hospital in Alliston restricts visitors again

Stevenson Memorial Hospital in Alliston restricts visitors again

Stevenson Memorial Hospital has taken a step back in its visitor policy.

The hospital is returning to its restrictive Phase 1 policy as COVID-19 cases continue to climb.

Visitors are not permitted for patients unless there are extenuating circumstances.

“We understand how difficult this is for patients and their families, however we must implement these restrictions to keep our hospital environment safe,” said Carrie Jeffreys, clinical services and chief nursing executive vice-president. “These restrictions are temporary and the safety of our patients, staff and physicians is a top priority.”

In the spring, while the hospital’s visitor policy was also in Phase 1, it implemented virtual options to connect patients with family members.

“During the last Phase 1 restrictions, we were able to connect patients virtually with loved ones and the community was very accommodating. We made these connections while following guidelines from public health, keeping everyone safe, which we intend to do this time as well,” Jeffreys said.

Tablets can be used at the bedside to allow patients to connect with loved ones. Staff will also provide regular updates on the patient’s health status to a designated family member.

In addition, vulnerable patients in need of extra support with activities of daily life, such as eating, hygiene, communication and decision-making, will be allowed to have a designated care provider for this purpose.

“We are doing our best to align with hospitals in our area while keeping in mind the increase in cases, as well as guidelines from Ontario Health and our local health unit,” Jeffreys said.

Women in the birthing unit will continue to be allowed one support person (for the entire duration), and patients 18 years of age or younger may have one parent or legal guardian accompany them while in the hospital. Extenuating circumstances, such as a patient with cognitive impairment or a disability, will be managed on a case-by-case basis.

A priority on visitation will be given to patients who are palliative, who are actively dying or have extenuating circumstances.

For more details, visit .

BEHIND THE CRIMES: Can Junior Appiah’s killers be found 12 years later?

It has been 12 years since Prince Benard Appiah played soccer or video games with his brother. Twelve years since they listened to music or laughed together. 

Appiah’s younger brother, Junior William Appiah, was shot and killed at age 18 in broad daylight on Sept. 16, 2008 at a popular outdoor basketball court in Toronto’s Jane and Finch community. His killers have not been found. 

“I miss the bond that we had, the jokes, just growing up and hanging out, discussing music,” said Appiah, now 32.

“He loved to make people laugh. Everywhere I go, people tell me he was making everybody laugh. He was very funny and very kind as well. He always cared for people. He would go high and low for them.”

Despite how long his brother has been gone, Appiah, who is two years older, said he’ll never stop sharing his story, and never stop hoping that his killers will be found.

The shooting happened just after 5 p.m. at the court at the foot of the building. The killers, three of them, were captured on security cameras, and one of them didn’t even cover up.

“I was certain they would be able to identify this person,” Appiah said.

There were also witnesses in the area and Appiah assumes his brother wasn’t alone on the court either.

“Obviously someone out there knows,” he said. “But, at the time, they just go by this rule that there’s no snitching in Jane and Finch.”

Appiah remembers the day the shooting happened well. He’s the eldest of four children, Junior was second oldest, and they have two younger sisters. The family grew up in Jane and Finch, living with their mom. Less than a year before their brother’s death, the family had moved to Brampton, but the kids had their social lives in the neighbourhood so they were often in the Jane and Finch area.

Appiah had just finished a job interview with a security company in Scarborough. He got the job and was on his way out of the building, to hop on a bus to take him back to Jane and Finch. Then his cell phone rang.

“It was a friend of mine and he was telling me he heard rumours that Junior might have got shot. Hearing that, everything just stopped.”

He didn’t want to believe it. His friend said he would call back when he knew more and so Appiah boarded the bus.

Brothers Prince Appiah, left, and Junior have their photo taken around Christmas time years ago. – Appiah family photo

“Then maybe five or 10 minutes later, my phone started blowing up. A lot of people started messaging me, calling me,” he said. “At this point, I’m nervous and shaken up.”

He called his mom to tell her what he heard.

“She didn’t want to believe it, she was saying that’s not true, don’t talk like that.”

Appiah didn’t go back to Jane and Finch. He went to a friend’s house and watched the news. There were a number of shootings around the GTA that day and then the station named his brother and posted his yearbook photo on the TV screen. He and his mom later that night identified their brother’s body.

Appiah said the first five years were tough for his family. His mom wouldn’t go into Junior’s room and only finally packed up his possessions when they moved homes.

“I think she still holds onto his stuff, to this day,” he said. 

Junior William Appiah was shot and killed at the basketball court at 4400 Jane street in 2008. – Dan Pearce/Torstar

Appiah said the family received a lot of love and support from their friends, that’s what helped them get through this.

Most were surprised that this would happen to Junior. Appiah doesn’t think his brother was involved in gangs, but may have been killed because he was hanging out with the wrong crowd, and Junior’s killing may have been to send a message.

By sharing his brother’s story, Appiah hopes someone out there who knows something will speak up. He even made a 36-minute documentary under his artist name, Prince Young, to mark the 10th anniversary of his brother’s death with the hope it might spark something.

“We’re living now, but it’s so hard to know that someone kills your sibling and you don’t know who it is,” he said. “Is the killer still out there? They’re still out there, they’re in jail, or they’re dead. Who knows?”

He added he wouldn’t be surprised if someone either he or his brother knew knows something about the killing.


Brothers Junior Appiah, left, and Prince hang out on the hood of a car. – Appiah family photo

Toronto police last received a tip in Junior’s murder about four years ago, said Det. Const. Jeff Weatherbee, of the cold case unit.

He added police are always looking for leads.

“We always believe someone knows what happened,” he said. “Call Crime Stoppers, give us a name, help us out. We’ll go on any lead. Any tip is, even if it’s small, it may be small to someone, but it could be the last thing that we need to solve a case.”

He said an unsolved case, no matter how old, is never closed. New advances in technology allow police to relook at evidence in a new light.

Even when a case seems hopeless, there is still hope, Weatherbee said. The proved that. Toronto police were able to identify her killer 36 years after the young girl was raped and murdered.

“We never give up. Some cases take longer than others.”

If you have any information regarding Junior’s case, contact the homicide unit at 416-808-7400 or at , or anonymously through Crime Stoppers at 416−222−TIPS (8477) or at .

BEHIND THE CRIMES: Family, friend seek answers in ‘Soldier’s’ unsolved murder

Kurt McKechnie’s nickname was “Soldier.”

It was a moniker earned among friends for his 17 years in the Canadian Armed Forces, where, according to brother Todd, he served in Kuwait and France, was part of Desert Storm and helped bring down the Berlin Wall while stationed in Germany.

That is the man Todd remembers.

Harold Smith had known Kurt since Grade 4, when he started a friendship with him at Ryerson Public School in Cambridge. That kinship stayed intact through their years at Preston High School and post-secondary, as Kurt was a regular in the crowd when Smith’s band — he played with Andy Curran, Soho 69, Just Alice, Quintana RU and Roller — played the Matador, the Coronet or Nicholson’s Tavern.

“He was always standing right in front of me just headbanging like a nut.”

That is the man Smith remembers.

Unfortunately, most people remember Kurt as the first 2019 homicide in Waterloo region.

Kurt, 56, died in hospital from multiple gunshot wounds on Jan. 31 after he was shot at his girlfriend’s home on Southwood Drive, in the Surrey Gardens complex, at approximately 6:25 a.m.

Waterloo region police had little to go on initially. One theory was the shooting was part of a botched robbery. Some neighbours believe it was a targeted killing, which police later corroborated.

Waterloo region police forensic investigators gather evidence in the parking lot at 241 Southwood Dr. after the murder of Kurt McKechnie at the complex.
Waterloo region police forensic investigators gather evidence in the parking lot at 241 Southwood Dr. after the murder of Kurt McKechnie at the complex. | Bill Doucet/Metroland

Police released a video on Feb. 13, 2019, showing an SUV, which they believed was used by four perpetrators, parking near Kurt’s girlfriend’s unit. The four were seen leaving the townhouse just before 6:30 a.m. and on video fleeing the area.

Todd questioned the short video released by police, as he said he saw a longer version recorded by a friend that showed the men “running in and running out.” A month later, the video disappeared from the cellphones of those who had it.

Todd added Kurt also had his apartment broken into 10 days prior to his murder. Police arrested someone in that case.

The trail has since gone cold. In April 2019, Police Chief Bryan Larkin held a media roundtable about outstanding homicides in the region, which at the time included Helen Schaller, and said it was only a matter of time before investigators found the shooters.

“I have a very clear message to anybody involved in those crimes,” Larkin said.

“We encourage you, if you’re following the media, watching the media, we encourage you, with your counsel, to come forward and turn yourself in … because our major crime team, our investigators, are active, and we will find those responsible for these crimes and we will prosecute them to the fullest extent of the Criminal Code of Canada.”

Schaller’s killer was found and shot himself when cornered by police. Kurt’s murder has yet to be solved.

“We continue to appeal to the public,” said Const. Ashley Dietrich, police’s public information officer.

“At this point, these appeals have not led to significant information that would move this investigation forward.

“We have received limited information and we believe there are people who know what happened to Mr. McKechnie, or who have information that would assist investigators. We believe that there are witnesses or people with information that have not come forward for a variety of reasons.”

The stall in the investigation has frustrated Todd and his son Kyle. Noting Kurt had substance abuse issues since the end of his military duty due to post traumatic stress disorder — he also had a prescription for medical marijuana — Kyle believes his uncle’s lifestyle choices is why police are not “pursuing it a little bit more.”

“I think that’s the reason why they’re kind of trying to sweep it under the rug. You know what I mean? It’s one less dirt bag for them to worry about,” he said.

“It feels like just another soldier f—— getting thrown under the bus.”

The loss of his uncle is still very raw. As is the loss of a brother.

“I try to suppress it but sometimes it gets to me. It’s pretty traumatic,” said Todd, noting he found out about his brother when a friend called, beating the inevitable phone call from his mother.

“I have a lot of questions I’d like to ask, and nobody will return my call or anything. It feels like they don’t care. I want people to know my brother wasn’t always in trouble. He served our frickin’ country.”

Hoping investigators get the break they’re looking for, Todd holds onto the times the pair went fishing, camping and to concerts. He also brags about the athlete Kurt was as a teen, starring at Preston High School in track and field, football and hockey. He said Kurt also broke the high jump record for the Canadian Armed Forces when they were in France.

 Kurt McKechnie
Kurt McKechnie | Facebook photo

Smith also knew another side of Kurt, the one of a “tough” guy in town, but not one to go looking for trouble.

“If you’re from Preston, everybody knew who Kurt McKechnie was,” Smith said with a laugh.

“If you were hanging out with him, no one would bother you. He could fight. Back in the day, every little town had their scrappers, well, Kurt was one of them. But he was the nicest guy. He would do anything for you.”

That’s why it doesn’t surprise Smith that it took four people to “get the best of him.”

But Kurt was also into music, with AC/DC and their lead singer Bon Scott being his favourite. Being at shows are memories Smith holds dear.

“That’s what I want to remember about him. You hear stuff over the years and you’re like, well, if that’s what he’s into then that’s what he’s into. But the way I look at it is I don’t care who you are or what you’re into, you don’t deserve to get shot and die.”

Smith said the last time he saw Kurt was seven years ago when he had just come off a MuchMusic road show and was walking out of Scotiabank in downtown Preston. He saw Kurt coming down the street and the pair hugged.

Five years ago, Smith moved to Calgary. He didn’t see Kurt again.

Smith would like some resolution in his friend’s death.

“It’s just sad,” he said.

“You hear stories and I don’t know what’s true and what’s not true, but I’m just shocked nobody is coming forward.”

Anyone with information can speak with investigators at
ext. 8191 or leave an anonymous tip with Crime Stoppers at.

‘It’s a monster of a virus’: What these Ontario COVID-19 survivors want you to know about the virus — and how to make it through the second wave

As Ruth Castellanos watched cases of the strange new virus that had shut down China, then Italy and Spain, rise in Ontario last spring, she felt a pang of fear.

“I started thinking, ‘Oh my goodness,’ ” remembers the 38-year-old. “ ‘I hope it doesn’t get as bad here.’ ”

She couldn’t have known at that moment that she would soon become a case herself, part of a first wave of infected in the province who faced a terrifying disease that doctors knew little about.

Now, as they watch cases spike again, those patients have unique insights for those who will get this fall. People who, like them, will suddenly find themselves with strange symptoms or a positive test. And who can hopefully learn from them about everything from the importance of getting tested to the range of outcomes — and the little things that make it a bit easier to cope.

When Castellanos, a Hamilton college instructor who’s still unable to work, first became ill in May, she thought it would be over in a few weeks.

She thought it was just a respiratory virus.

She was wrong.

Still facing a constant “bombardment” of symptoms, from brain fog to a racing heart rate, she wants others to know that they can last for months.

“If you’re feeling any symptoms that you never felt before, fight for yourself to get help and get treated, because it’s not in your head,” she said.

“It’s affecting your brain, your heart, your organs, your stomach — it’s affecting everything.”

Castellanos, once an active avid gardener who now gets exhausted making dinner, is part of a group that call themselves “long-haulers,” people still struggling with lingering symptoms of the virus.

She said it’s important to know that if you’re not critical, you’ll be largely left to fend for yourself at home. She made it through with the support of her husband, and her dog, Buttons, who never left her side.

She tried to take her mind off the situation by watching funny shows, like all 60 episodes of a Spanish soap opera, and freezing meals, so they’d be available on days she was too tired to cook.

It’s also good to have people you can count on “on speed dial in case you need help,” she said.

Castellanos eventually tested negative. If too much time elapses between the first symptoms and testing, this can happen, experts say. She was told by one doctor she definitely had COVID-19, a clinical diagnosis she feels should be treated as just as important as a positive test, especially as testing was not open to everyone in the early days of the pandemic in the province.

She eventually found a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist on her own to consult about her persistent symptoms. Her advice is to “seek medical help, and if you’re denied, keep pushing.”

If a family doctor doesn’t have the answers, ask them to send you to someone who might know more, she said.

Getting tested quickly is one of the most important things to do, said Susie Goulding, another long-hauler, so that a lack of a positive test is not a barrier to care later.

Goulding, who’s also been struggling with a range of symptoms since late March, initially did not qualify for testing, because she hadn’t travelled and didn’t have a fever.

Although, like Castellanos, she was also told by a doctor to assume it was COVID-19, she was negative by the time she finally got the test.

“You need to go right away and get tested, because if you don’t get tested and if you have it, you could potentially end up a long-hauler and you might have difficulty trying to convince people that you actually have COVID-19,” said the 52-year-old Oakville floral designer, who’s still not able to work.

“A proper diagnosis is key.”

She also recommends having Tylenol, a thermometer and a pulse oximeter, a small device that measures oxygen levels in the blood at home.

But it’s hard to prepare in advance, because “the thing is that everybody displays such different symptoms.”

It’s like “putting your hand into a grab bag and pulling out a fistful of symptoms and that will be how your body reacts and how your COVID-19 journey is going to be,” she said.

It’s also important to look out for mental health, and get support for the anxiety and depression that might follow the isolation and trauma related to COVID-19, she added.

In June, Goulding started on Facebook, which now has more than 4,000 members. It’s been critical, she said, to connect with other survivors from across the country, who can share experiences, advice, research — even the names of specialists or studies that they’re involved in. This peer support has been essential, she said, especially as long-haulers are left without a one-stop shop for followup care. They’ve had to advocate for themselves, as they realized in real time just how devastating COVID-19 can be.

“I never thought in a million years that I would catch it,” she added. “It’s a monster of a virus.”

That’s something Heidi Robertson knows all too well. Her husband Torry, a nurse who worked in Michigan, across the border from their LaSalle, Ont. home near Windsor, got COVID-19 in March.

The 46-year-old “basketball dad” and “big teddy bear” “never got sick prior to this,” she said. Other than high blood pressure, he didn’t have any underlying medical conditions.

She warns others not to assume that just because they’re younger and healthy that they’ll be fine.

For Torry, shortness of breath was a later symptom, after vomiting, fever, loss of taste and smell, and diarrhea, but things quickly went downhill after that started.

He was taken to the hospital in an ambulance at the end of March.

Weeks before, he had told his wife that he didn’t want to be put on a ventilator if he got the virus.

In early April, over FaceTime, after doctors told her it was needed, she asked him if he’d changed his mind.

“He looked at me — he looked so weak — and he said, ‘I’m OK with it.’ He said, ‘Tell all the kids I love them, and I love you,’ and that was it,” she remembered

He spent seven terrifying weeks in the ICU, and 38 days on the ventilator, going into kidney failure at one point and needing dialysis.

During that time, Robertson said she stopped going on social media and reading about other cases online. Instead, she only listened to the doctors and nurses treating him, cutting out all the noise.

Torry was discharged from Hôtel-Dieu Grace Healthcare in Windsor earlier this month, but is left with a severe brain injury that has impacted his speech and balance. He’s continuing outpatient rehab.

“We just take it day-by-day,” Robertson said, adding she’ll always be grateful to the team that saved his life. “It’s been such a long road, and we have so much more to go.”

She’d tell others in the same spot to just keep putting one foot in front of the other, try to stay positive and have faith, even in the face of so many unknowns.

“Ask a lot of questions of the doctors,” she added, “and let the doctors know anything that has been going on with your loved one.”

Most people will not have such dramatic tales of COVID-19. For some, there will be no symptoms.

For others, it will feel like almost nothing.

But, said 20-year-old Hannah Abrahamse, that doesn’t mean it’s something to take lightly.

The Trent University English major was studying abroad in England when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Canadians to get home fast. She threw a few things into a suitcase and arrived in Toronto in late March, isolating in her grandmother’s empty house in Orillia.

About 10 days in, she started noticing a stuffy nose. She was sneezing, with watery eyes, a headache, a little bit of a sore throat, but no fever or cough.

Fearing for her mom and brother, who are immunocompromised, she pushed to get tested, and was turned away from an Orillia assessment centre twice because her symptoms weren’t serious enough.

Finally, after a referral from a family doctor, she got the test in early April and was stunned at the result: positive.

“I wasn’t even really concerned at all by my symptoms, because I didn’t feel very sick. I just thought, ‘Oh, this is really weird and bad timing. I have these bad allergies, probably because I’m back in Canada,’ ” she remembered.

“It was a good thing that I did, because otherwise I wouldn’t have known that I had COVID-19.”

She’d advise others to do the same.

The worst part of a mild bout with the disease, she said, was the isolation.

Watching the Netflix documentary ‘Tiger King’, doing lots of YouTube yoga, FaceTiming friends, and porch-drops of chocolate chip cookies from an aunt helped pass the time.

“I was glad to do it to keep everybody safe,” she said.

“What I want to make clear is it’s not about you, it’s about other people.”

Abrahamse was in a position where she could clearly see the chain of possible transmission, from herself to her mom or brother, and how her actions would directly impact others.

Many people might not see that so clearly, she said, but it will still be there.

She’s been hearing about some of her peers lately who are going to parties or seeing lots of different people every night — who shrug and assume since they’re young, they’ll be fine.

“And that’s really frustrating, especially because you can get it and not know if you don’t take your symptoms seriously, or you can be totally asymptomatic,” she said.

The best advice, agrees long-hauler Goulding, is to try not to get COVID-19 in the first place, so that you don’t pass it on to anyone else, or risk a complicated battle with it yourself.

“Take all precautions in trying to avoid it,” she said, “Like the plague that it is.”

May Warren is a Toronto-based breaking news reporter for the Toronto Star. Follow her on Twitter:

BEHIND THE CRIMES: Family, friend seek answers in ‘Soldier’s’ unsolved murder

Kurt McKechnie’s nickname was “Soldier.”

It was a moniker earned among friends for his 17 years in the Canadian Armed Forces, where, according to brother Todd, he served in Kuwait and France, was part of Desert Storm and helped bring down the Berlin Wall while stationed in Germany.

That is the man Todd remembers.

Harold Smith had known Kurt since Grade 4, when he started a friendship with him at Ryerson Public School in Cambridge. That kinship stayed intact through their years at Preston High School and post-secondary, as Kurt was a regular in the crowd when Smith’s band — he played with Andy Curran, Soho 69, Just Alice, Quintana RU and Roller — played the Matador, the Coronet or Nicholson’s Tavern.

“He was always standing right in front of me just headbanging like a nut.”

That is the man Smith remembers.

Unfortunately, most people remember Kurt as the first 2019 homicide in Waterloo region.

Kurt, 56, died in hospital from multiple gunshot wounds on Jan. 31 after he was shot at his girlfriend’s home on Southwood Drive, in the Surrey Gardens complex, at approximately 6:25 a.m.

Waterloo region police had little to go on initially. One theory was the shooting was part of a botched robbery. Some neighbours believe it was a targeted killing, which police later corroborated.

Waterloo region police forensic investigators gather evidence in the parking lot at 241 Southwood Dr. after the murder of Kurt McKechnie at the complex.
Waterloo region police forensic investigators gather evidence in the parking lot at 241 Southwood Dr. after the murder of Kurt McKechnie at the complex. | Bill Doucet/Metroland

Police released a video on Feb. 13, 2019, showing an SUV, which they believed was used by four perpetrators, parking near Kurt’s girlfriend’s unit. The four were seen leaving the townhouse just before 6:30 a.m. and on video fleeing the area.

Todd questioned the short video released by police, as he said he saw a longer version recorded by a friend that showed the men “running in and running out.” A month later, the video disappeared from the cellphones of those who had it.

Todd added Kurt also had his apartment broken into 10 days prior to his murder. Police arrested someone in that case.

The trail has since gone cold. In April 2019, Police Chief Bryan Larkin held a media roundtable about outstanding homicides in the region, which at the time included Helen Schaller, and said it was only a matter of time before investigators found the shooters.

“I have a very clear message to anybody involved in those crimes,” Larkin said.

“We encourage you, if you’re following the media, watching the media, we encourage you, with your counsel, to come forward and turn yourself in … because our major crime team, our investigators, are active, and we will find those responsible for these crimes and we will prosecute them to the fullest extent of the Criminal Code of Canada.”

Schaller’s killer was found and shot himself when cornered by police. Kurt’s murder has yet to be solved.

“We continue to appeal to the public,” said Const. Ashley Dietrich, police’s public information officer.

“At this point, these appeals have not led to significant information that would move this investigation forward.

“We have received limited information and we believe there are people who know what happened to Mr. McKechnie, or who have information that would assist investigators. We believe that there are witnesses or people with information that have not come forward for a variety of reasons.”

The stall in the investigation has frustrated Todd and his son Kyle. Noting Kurt had substance abuse issues since the end of his military duty due to post traumatic stress disorder — he also had a prescription for medical marijuana — Kyle believes his uncle’s lifestyle choices is why police are not “pursuing it a little bit more.”

“I think that’s the reason why they’re kind of trying to sweep it under the rug. You know what I mean? It’s one less dirt bag for them to worry about,” he said.

“It feels like just another soldier f—— getting thrown under the bus.”

The loss of his uncle is still very raw. As is the loss of a brother.

“I try to suppress it but sometimes it gets to me. It’s pretty traumatic,” said Todd, noting he found out about his brother when a friend called, beating the inevitable phone call from his mother.

“I have a lot of questions I’d like to ask, and nobody will return my call or anything. It feels like they don’t care. I want people to know my brother wasn’t always in trouble. He served our frickin’ country.”

Hoping investigators get the break they’re looking for, Todd holds onto the times the pair went fishing, camping and to concerts. He also brags about the athlete Kurt was as a teen, starring at Preston High School in track and field, football and hockey. He said Kurt also broke the high jump record for the Canadian Armed Forces when they were in France.

 Kurt McKechnie
Kurt McKechnie | Facebook photo

Smith also knew another side of Kurt, the one of a “tough” guy in town, but not one to go looking for trouble.

“If you’re from Preston, everybody knew who Kurt McKechnie was,” Smith said with a laugh.

“If you were hanging out with him, no one would bother you. He could fight. Back in the day, every little town had their scrappers, well, Kurt was one of them. But he was the nicest guy. He would do anything for you.”

That’s why it doesn’t surprise Smith that it took four people to “get the best of him.”

But Kurt was also into music, with AC/DC and their lead singer Bon Scott being his favourite. Being at shows are memories Smith holds dear.

“That’s what I want to remember about him. You hear stuff over the years and you’re like, well, if that’s what he’s into then that’s what he’s into. But the way I look at it is I don’t care who you are or what you’re into, you don’t deserve to get shot and die.”

Smith said the last time he saw Kurt was seven years ago when he had just come off a MuchMusic road show and was walking out of Scotiabank in downtown Preston. He saw Kurt coming down the street and the pair hugged.

Five years ago, Smith moved to Calgary. He didn’t see Kurt again.

Smith would like some resolution in his friend’s death.

“It’s just sad,” he said.

“You hear stories and I don’t know what’s true and what’s not true, but I’m just shocked nobody is coming forward.”

Anyone with information can speak with investigators at
ext. 8191 or leave an anonymous tip with Crime Stoppers at.

Trump, Biden debate was just a click away

WASHINGTON—“In February I said ‘This is a serious problem.’ Trump denied it,” Democratic nominee said in a hall in Philadelphia, answering a question about . “He missed enormous opportunities, and kept saying things that aren’t true.”

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“He has to say that. He’s a friend of mine, he’s a good guy. Wrong or not wrong,” said in Florida, answering a question about Chris Christie admitting he should have worn a mask to the White House. “You have to understand, I’m the president, I can’t be locked in a room.”

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“When a president doesn’t wear a mask, people say well it must not be that important,” Biden said. “I think it matters what we say.”

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“I’ve heard many different stories about the masks,” Trump said. “One that they want, one that they don’t want.” He cited a doctor who he said opposes masks, and moderator Savannah Guthrie pointed out that the person he was citing wasn’t an infectious disease expert. “Well, I don’t know,” Trump said. “He’s one of the great experts of the world.”

The were to have faced off Thursday in the second of three scheduled debates. But Trump’s COVID diagnosis two weeks ago led organizers to insist the debate be held remotely — after which Trump backed out. ABC scheduled a town hall with Biden in its place. NBC followed up by scheduling a town hall with Trump at the same time. So the men went head-to-head in a different way, one the reality TV star president may prefer: competing for ratings among channel flippers on different networks.

I clicked back and forth, trying to construct a debate from the candidates using my remote. It wasn’t the most coherent way to get a sense of the candidates. But then, the debate in late September when they shared the same stage was anyhow. If nothing else, this format meant Biden got to finish his sentences.

That’s something Trump keeps insisting he can’t do — just Thursday afternoon, he was saying he wished he could watch Biden’s event just to “see if he can last.” But Biden looked comfortable and in command of both his faculties and the relevant facts as he spoke for 90 minutes with moderator George Stephanopoulos.

A Trump supporter asked Biden about rolling back Trump’s tax cuts — wouldn’t that hurt regular people? “$1.3 trillion of his $2 trillion tax cuts went to the top one-tenth of one per cent, that’s what I’m talking about rolling back,” Biden said. He said that during the COVID crisis, billionaires had increased their wealth by an additional $700 billion — and that those people need to contribute while stimulus should help those suffering, not those thriving.

“Let me be clear, I do not want to ban fracking,” he said to another question. But, he said, it must be regulated, and he pivoted to his plan to invest heavily in Green Energy to both protect the environment and create jobs. “The president thinks it’s a joke, I think it’s jobs,” Biden said.

Biden acknowledged that the crime bill he pushed through Congress in the 1990s was, in many ways, a mistake that was racist in its application. He sheepishly apologized for rambling, and told questioners he hoped he’d answered their questions.

And he addressed a question he’s taken some flak for not answering: When Biden spoke about how he thought the constitution implied that a Supreme Court seat shouldn’t be filled once an election had begun, Stephanopoulos pressed him on whether he would expand the Supreme Court to balance Trump’s last-minute pick. Biden said his final response would depend on how the current confirmation process unfolds. But he promised a firm answer before election day.

As for Trump, he’s spent the past week on a marathon of rallies after returning to the trail after COVID treatment. Tuesday in Pennsylvania, Wednesday in Iowa, Thursday afternoon in North Carolina. Hours before his town hall, Trump had told the North Carolina rally that NBC was “setting him up” to look bad as part of a “con job,” but he’d figured what the hell, “It’s a free hour on television.”

In contrast to Biden’s laid-back tone, Trump brought that bombast to Florida, taking a combative approach to moderator Guthrie, who challenged him often. “You do read newspapers?” he asked her at one point. “Did you ever hear of a word called negotiation?” he asked at another. “You telling me doesn’t make it a fact, let me tell ya,” he said.

He blamed China (again) for the coronavirus, blamed Nancy Pelosi for holding up a stimulus deal (“Nancy Pelosi we are ready to sign”), and blamed the Internal Revenue Service for his lack of tax transparency (“I’m treated badly by the IRS. Very, very badly”).

Turning to the recent New York Times reporting on his tax returns, Guthrie asked Trump who he owes more than $400 million to. He appeared to confirm the paper’s reporting on the size of his debts, while denying they were anything nefarious. “I don’t owe Russia money,” he said, “I will let you know who I owe. It’s a small amount of money.” Compared to his assets, he said repeatedly, it’s a small percentage of his net worth. “$400 million is a peanut,” he said.

Given the opportunity, he refused to disavow the bizarre QAnon conspiracy theorists who support him. But he did give the answer people have wanted to hear to ease concerns he might reject election results if he loses. “They ask, will you accept a peaceful transfer (of power), and the answer is, yes I will,” he said. “Ideally I don’t want a transfer, because I want to win.”

At times flipping back and forth did provide a proxy for a debate. Both candidates discussed corporate tax rates — Biden promised to raise them, while pointing out that a Wall Street firm had reported his platform might create 18.6 million jobs. Trump said he’d lowered the tax rates to attract companies. “Our corporate taxes were the highest in the world, and now they’re among the lowest, and what that means is jobs.”

But in many ways, the experience may have been preferable to many viewers than a traditional debate could have been. Viewers got to see the candidates interacting with voters, answering at length, presumably in the way they wanted to. The approach and tone of each candidate was obvious — and the differences were significant.

And unlike the debate in September, when a candidate was cut off without being able to finish a thought, it was because the viewer chose to hit the button on their remote.

In closing, Trump was asked to address voters unhappy with his performance but willing to give him another chance — what would he say to them? “I’ve done a great job,” Trump said, going on to recite his familiar stump speech boasts about the pre-COVID economy.

Biden was asked to contemplate losing — and suggested he’d go back to his work at the Biden Institute, trying to ease the divisions in the country. That would be his project, he suggested, win or lose. “That’s what presidents do, we’ve got to heal this nation,” Biden said. “We’ve got a great opportunity to own the 21st century, but we can’t do it divided.”

Those switching between networks saw Trump — argumentative, boastful, on the edge of his seat — as always compelling if uncomfortable viewing. And then CLICK: there was Biden: relaxed, speaking softly, leaning back, and promising to change the channel.

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

New Barrie restaurant holding job fair from Oct. 14-17

Despite the ongoing pandemic and uncertainty in the marketplace, the Charcoal Group is forging ahead with expansion plans in Barrie with the goal of opening a new restaurant next month.

The restaurant will be holding a job fair from Oct. 14-16 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Oct. 17 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Hiring will take place for all culinary and service roles for the restaurant’s newest location on Fairview Road.

The job fair is being held in the Churchill ballroom at the Holiday Inn ().

New Tecumseth taxpayers could be asked to pay this much more in 2021

The budget is kicking off with a capital levy of $38.4 million, which works out to a 1.95 per cent general levy increase.

The town is also adding a 0.5 per cent increase to replace aging infrastructure, bringing the proposed increase up to 2.45 per cent.

For the average owner of a home worth $452,695, this would translate to a property tax increase of $56. This is slightly below the previous year’s increase of $70.

The budget working session will take place Nov. 9 starting at 9 a.m.

A public input session will be held Nov. 10 at 7 p.m.

Residents who want to make comments need to

The town plans to pass the budget on Dec. 14.

Major capital projects proposed for 2021 include:

• Dayfoot Street reconstruction

• 7th Line road improvements

• Fire Station 4 and Fire Station 3 expansion

• Gravel road program

• Faulkner Park construction

• Boyne River Trail West

• Beattie Bridge Creek crossing

• Development application tracking system

• Urban design and place making guidelines

So we get a COVID-19 vaccine. Then what? A glimpse of how the coming months could play out

As she rushes to her gate, the traveller can see her plane through the airport window, sitting on the tarmac, loaded and ready to leave.

After a year of drastically reduced travel, the airport is bustling. As she approaches the desk, she pulls out her usual passport and boarding pass, then opens a new app.

She shows it to the boarding agent, and it flashes her confirmation: She has the required vaccine.

It’s the kind of scene that’s becoming increasingly easy to imagine as a working COVID-19 vaccine gets closer to regulatory approval.

Suddenly, things such as travel passes that vouch for your vaccination status, concerts that require a shot to get in the door, or even questions about whether business might refuse to serve the unvaccinated are no longer the purview of speculative fiction writers, but of policymakers, experts and members of the general public.

With doses expected to be scarce, at least at first, we appear set to enter a new era of uneven vaccine access, beginning the day the first doses become available, and ending when they become available to everyone.

That time in the middle? Likely to stretch at least a year in Canada, it will force us to confront questions about who gets a vaccine, when to keep track and how we might take our first tentative steps back to normalcy.

It could also, experts warn, give rise to inequities as the vaccine splinters society into the haves and the have nots.

“I keep thinking about that Dr. Seuss book about the star-bellied Sneetches,” says Alison Thompson, an associate professor in the faculty of pharmacy at the University of Toronto, who specializes in public health ethics.

“They’re basically these little birdlike creatures, and some of them have stars on their bellies, and some don’t,” she says.

In the book, the Sneetches with stars discriminate against those without despite the fact the stars are largely out of their owners’ control.

Thompson raises the question: Could vaccines play out in the same way?

“You know, while it may not be something that’s visible on our skin, it’s certainly something that can be used to mark us as different from one another.”

When the first vaccine is rolled out

Speaking to reporters who were either masked or watching via livefeed, as has become the new press conference norm, said last week that a vaccine could land as early as the first months of next year.

It’s a light at the end of the tunnel that has only burned brighter since have rolled in from several leading vaccine candidates.

Once approved by Health Canada, the first vaccine doses are expected to be in short supply, initially. With that in mind, the National Advisory Committee on Vaccines has released recommendations on who it thinks should be first in line.

In order to “minimize serious illness and overall deaths while minimizing societal disruption as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic,” the group argues it should be those at high risk of serious illness or death, those who are likely to transmit it to those at high risk, and essential workers.

In other words, if you’re young and healthy, you may have to wait.

But even once you get a shot, don’t expect it to be a magic bullet, says Dr. Prabhat Jha, an epidemiologist and professor of global health at the University of Toronto.

“If you got vaccinated tomorrow or I got vaccinated tomorrow, it doesn’t mean we go out on the street and kiss people,” he said. “The face masks and physically distancing will have to continue.”

In the short term, a vaccine will reduce your chance of getting COVID-19, but it’s not clear yet how effective the vaccines will be in stopping transmission.

So it’s possible that you could still be carrying the virus and giving it to others. It will take time for the country to reach what’s called herd immunity, when enough people are either immunized or have recovered from COVID-19 that spread slows.

Once people are vaccinated, it’ll become slightly easier to go out to eat or see friends, Jha says, but a vaccine won’t undo the past year.

“We have to be realistic,” he said. “Hopefully, it means a lot more normalcy in terms of how we can carry on, but all these things that we’re doing now? In most part, they would need to continue.”

Tracking who is vaccinated, and who is not

Half a world away, a pilot project is rolling out in eastern Africa that might provide a model for our post-vaccine world.

There are truck drivers who regularly pick up loads of food and essential supplies in port cities in Kenya or Tanzania, then set out for the cluster of landlocked countries just inland, knitted to the coast only by road.

When they approach a border, they pull out a phone and show the screen to an official to verify that they’ve recently tested negative for COVID-19, using a test and within a time frame that has been agreed to by all countries in advance.

This process is in place among a group of six countries known as the East African Community, which often work together as a single economic bloc.

Together, the countries asked a Swiss-based non-profit public trust, The Commons Project, to create a technology platform that would certify that drivers had taken a recent, credible COVID-19 test and weren’t carrying the pandemic across borders.

There is precedent for the approach. Cards certifying the carrier has been vaccinated for yellow fever have long been common in parts of Africa and South America.

The fast-changing nature of COVID-19, though, demands a digital approach, says The Commons Project’s chief medical officer, Dr. Brad Perkins.

A digital platform is able to keep pace; putting it on a phone means it can be easily verified, he says. “It’s not simple, but it’s doable.”

Now, the project is hoping to take the lessons learned in East Africa and apply it to the world, with the creation of a new platform called CommonPass, which, the project hopes, will allow anyone on the planet to eventually certify their testing or vaccination status.

The project recently tested the prototype on flights with two different airlines, one from Hong Kong to Singapore and the other from London to New York, with the aim of having a working version ready by early next year.

CommonPass doesn’t try to make claims about anyone’s immunity. Instead, it’s like carrying around your testing or vaccination history in your pocket, Perkins says.

The promise of the technology comes with a spectre of concern for some.

“For the safety of patients, it’s important to know who has and has not received a vaccine, despite concerns about having that information being tracked in any way,” says Maxwell Smith, a public health ethicist at Western University who is a member of the World Health Organization’s ethics and COVID-19 working group.

“But there’s a separate issue of what we do with that information, and whether that creates a system that would prevent some people from working or from going to school or travelling or whatever it might be used for.

“And I think that’s where we get into a very ethically murky territory.”

But Perkins, who previously worked in public health for the American Centre for Disease Control, said the team behind CommonPass is sensitive to the “slippery ethical slope” here.

Countries will get to decide what their specific entrance requirements are — perhaps they want travellers to have had a certain vaccine, or have had it within a certain time period. All CommonPass is doing is verifying whether a person has met that requirement. The pass does not share anyone’s health data with governments or airlines, he adds.

Travel will be never be totally risk free, he says, but the goal is to make it possible for people to control their own health data and countries, . There will be a printable version for people who don’t have phones. The non-profit hopes to make the platform free to travellers, but charge airlines a fee to pay for the infrastructure.

“There’s lots of hand waving about apps and mobile devices and technology,” he says. “All it boils down to is: Countries have an urgent need to find a way to trust a laboratory result or, in the case of vaccines, vaccination status, that originated in another country.

“This is all about creating global trust in the ability to share high-quality health data that can make international travel safer.”

Canada vs. The World

The problem of a class system divided by vaccine — “vaccinated versus unvaccinated” — is also poised to go global.

It seems likely that Canada will be able to vaccinate its population before many countries around the world.

What then?

Would Canada close its borders to the unvaccinated? Should Canadians be allowed to go abroad while the pandemic still rages elsewhere?

Smith says we may see rich countries opening back up and starting to travel and trade with each other long before poorer countries, which will only widen the divide between rich and poor globally.

He adds that the virus doesn’t recognize borders, so it’s arguably in Canada’s interest to help other countries.

“If Canada can play a role in ensuring that other countries are getting the vaccine that they need as well, that isn’t just a function of charity, it’s actually helping to protect our interests as well.”

‘A splintering in society’

Here at home, there will also likely be pressure to keep track of who is vaccinated and who is not.

BBC reported that Ticketmaster has been exploring some sort of vaccine policy for concertgoers, although the company was adamant it will not require vaccines.

This summer, USA Today from three professors from Case Western Reserve University in Ohio in which they argued those who don’t take a vaccine should be denied non-essential government services and face higher insurance premiums. They said businesses should be allowed to refuse to both employ and serve the unvaccinated.

Thompson says these scenarios, where an employer wants staff back at work, but demands vaccination status, or insurance companies that jack up premiums for those who don’t line up for the shot, are real concerns.

“Do we need a sort of moratorium on hiring and firing based on immune status? It’s not easy, though, because there are some places that justifiably require that, like health-care institutions, for example. So it can’t be a blunt instrument.”

While it’s not a completely unreasonable idea, Smith said, he remains wary of any commercial entity that would require vaccination status. “It really seems like we’re scrambling to identify anything that will allow us to get back to normal,” he says.

“If by simply having that as a checkbox, that means we can have big concerts or have big sporting events again? Then I think there’s a sort of an undue influence for commercial entities to do that, no matter whether it’s responsible or ethically appropriate.”

From a business perspective, he argues, there won’t be enough vaccinated people at first to justify running a concert or sports game just for them. Later on, the hope is that herd immunity will start to kick in, so there’ll be less justification for keeping the unvaccinated out.

“I also think that it creates a splintering in society of those who are able to access a vaccine,” he adds. “That’s going to put some in a more advantageous position if they’re able to go to concerts or go to school or go to work or whatever the vaccination status would sort of allow you to do.

“I think that’s something we need to be really careful about doing.”

Smallpox and history’s lessons

Canada’s early history is punctuated by resurgences of and battles against the so-called “speckled monster.” As deadly as Ebola, smallpox wiped out whole towns, was occasionally debated as a weapon and killed untold thousands.

When a came to Quebec in 1769, just a handful of years after it fell to the British, that protection came first to the well-to-do families in Montreal and Quebec City, and to the British troops stationed nearby.

Priorities haven’t shifted a huge amount since then, either. Almost two and half centuries later, players for the Calgary Flames were able to skip the line to get the H1N1 vaccine in 2009 — though it did spark outrage among the general public.

Assuming we choose to follow the prevailing advice to vaccinate the most vulnerable first, there will still come a day when seniors and health-care workers are protected, and we’ll have to decide who comes next.

That decision may get harder.

It will be important, Thompson says, that the government is clear about who is vaccinated and why. People should have a chance to voice their opinions about who should be prioritized.

“Science alone isn’t going to tell us what to do here,” she said. In many ways, questions about who to vaccinate reflect what we value as a society. Who do we want to protect most? Is businesses opening first the most important thing?

“These are value judgments and society ought to weigh in on these kinds of questions.”

Of course, regardless of who is vaccinated first, once those doses start rolling out, a divide may begin to emerge.

“We’ve been, to some extent, all in it together up until this point; but once people start getting vaccinated, it becomes vaccinated versus unvaccinated,” Thompson said.

Once people get vaccinated, you might see them become less willing to follow public health orders or to engage in the sort of social distancing and mask wearing that would protect the unvaccinated, Smith adds.

Remember, just because you’re vaccinated doesn’t mean you’re infallible — or that you can’t spread the virus. (The new vaccines might help with transmission, but that remains to be seen.)

“If 10 per cent of our population were to become vaccinated, and if we can imagine that the vaccine were something like 90 per cent effective, having those 10 per cent of people travelling all around Canada, or travelling all around the world, and not adhering to other public health measures that we have in place, could be detrimental to the rest of the population,” he said.

Many experts worry about the number of people who will choose to reject the shot.

Revisiting the history of smallpox again shows this is not a new issue.

were more skeptical than their northern neighbours from the start about new concepts such as vaccination, or its crude predeccsor, known as variolation, because of religious concerns it interfered with God’s domain. It has even been argued that differing rates of immunization played a role in the American Revolution and General George Washington’s failed invasion.

When Washington launched his attack in 1775, his forces were quickly laid low by a smallpox outbreak that largely bounced off the immunized British forces north of the St. Lawrence River.

Washington’s troops retreated, and what would become Canada remained part of the British Empire.

Mission accomplished

Many of the decisions about who to vaccinate, and how and why, are being made right now.

Many eyes will be watching to see how this plays out.

“The vaccine has so much riding on it because it’s been held up as the only way out; so we’re starting to think about the end of this pandemic,” Thompson said.

“But what do we want society to look like on the other side of all this? What kind of damage is going to be done by not getting this right, by not engaging with the people, by not building those trusting relationships between the citizenry and public health and government?

Smith points to how the pandemic has cracked the inequalities in our society wide open.

The pandemic has not hit us all equally, and we don’t all have the same access to health care. Maybe, he said, the vaccination campaign will be another chance to rebalance the scales.

“It’d be great if we could really appreciate the lessons from what we’ve seen for the past 10 months.”

Barrie council holds moment of silence in honour of slain OPP Const. Marc Hovingh

It was a small, solemn token of gratitude for an officer’s ultimate sacrifice.

Barrie council members paid tribute to OPP Const. Marc Hovingh with a moment of silence at the start of their meeting Nov. 23. Hovingh, who grew up in the city, died in the line of duty following a shootout on a property in Gore Bay on Manitoulin Island last week.

“I’d like to express our deepest condolences to the friends, family and colleagues of the fallen officer,” Mayor Jeff Lehman said. “He was a very active member within his community and his church.”

Hovingh attended Timothy Christian School, but his family moved away from Barrie before he finished high school, Lehman said.

Earlier in the day, , including members of the city’s police and fire departments, lined bridges over Hwy. 400 to honour Hovingh, whose body had been brought to Toronto for an autopsy and was being taken back to Manitoulin Island in a hearse accompanied by two police cruisers.

Hovingh, a 28-year veteran of the OPP, is survived by his wife and four children.