‘Hopeful we have peaked’: No new COVID-19 deaths reported Oct. 7 at Simcoe Manor in Beeton, but case count still climbing

‘Hopeful we have peaked’: No new COVID-19 deaths reported Oct. 7 at Simcoe Manor in Beeton, but case count still climbing

Two more residents have tested positive for COVID-19 at Simcoe Manor in Beeton, but no new deaths have been reported.

In an update provided Oct. 7, the County of Simcoe said 27 residents have tested positive for the virus, an increase of three from the 24 cases reported the previous day.

All residents were tested Oct. 2 when the outbreak was declared, and most of the results for the home’s 120 residents have been received. Ninety of them came back negative and the results of four tests are still pending.

Three residents have died so far from the virus, including two on the weekend and another earlier this week.

Seven staff have also been infected, and this number remains unchanged over the previous day.

“We are hopeful, with the vast majority of our test results now being received, that this will give us an indication of the COVID exposure,” said Jane Sinclair, the county’s general manager of health and emergency services. “Moving forward, we are hopeful we have peaked and are more stable of our outbreak status.”

All of the staff were tested Oct. 5. They have been tested once every two weeks over the course of the pandemic. Another mass testing will take place again, but Sinclair didn’t say if it would happen before the next scheduled date, which would be around Oct. 19.

She said the home is working with the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit to determine the testing requirements for residents, but individual testing will be done if needed.

“If any resident develops any sign or symptom, we will automatically test them at that time immediately,” she said.

Eighteen of the residents are asymptomatic, and while Sinclair didn’t provide specifics on the residents who are experiencing symptoms, she said all of them are being cared for at the home.

“There’s a range of response to COVID,” she said. “As we’ve seen in the general population, individuals tend to respond differently.”

Sinclair talked again about all the measures that are in place to prevent further spread, such as enhanced cleaning, personal protective equipment requirements, and cohorting of staff.

“We have been very, very active in our prevention strategies, and we feel this indicates a positive sign for us that our steps are in fact working,” she said.

Justin Trudeau offers help to mayors in COVID-19 hot spots

OTTAWA – Prime Ministerhas promised help to big city mayors in Ontario and Quebec’s hot spots as rising coronavirus infections expose ongoing gaps in health care and the social safety net in the two provinces.

In Toronto, help is expected soon via a revised business aid package that Mayor John Tory said he’s been assured will be retroactive to Oct. 1, and that he hopes will be simpler and more flexible than the last round of commercial assistance and rent relief, in order to address fears expressed by many small business and restaurant owners they cannot survive a new round of closures.

In Ottawa, that federal help could come via a surge in COVID-19 testing and laboratory capacity at a federal building Trudeau is offering to make available to local public health authorities.

The federal government is already providing hundreds of federal workers to do contact tracing in Ontario, Alberta and Quebec, and agreements with other provincial governments, which are responsible for testing and contact tracing.

In several phone calls over the past three days, Trudeau spoke to mayors in Toronto, Peel Region, Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec City to determine their needs.

The messages from Tory and Ottawa’s Jim Watson were similar, according to the two mayors: the spike in new cases is an immediate challenge, putting a strain on testing and contact tracing in their cities, as well as on housing and shelter resources.

Tory said the pandemic has created a “huge” housing problem for Toronto, and he told Trudeau the $1 billion fund to rapidly convert buildings to support immediate isolation housing needs “was a great start” to address what is also a longer-term problem.

“We had to literally move 3,000 people into alternate accommodations because the existing shelter system didn’t allow for physical distancing,” Tory said in an interview. He also wants more support for mental health service needs, and underlined Toronto’s testing and contact tracing backlog challenges.

Watson told Trudeau the $1 billion rapid housing initiative announced last month is set to end Mar. 31 when the need for help is likely to run into summer months. He asked Trudeau to speed up a federal offer of the use of a federal building in the southern Ottawa suburb of Fallowfield with an on-site lab to expand COVID-19 testing capacity – a plan that Watson said might be finalized in the next week or two.

The mayors flagged their concerns for small businesses, especially the hospitality sector, and the strain on municipal funding as public transit costs remain high while ridership remains low.

Money from the $19-billion federal Safe Restart Agreements with provinces has begun to flow to municipalities in the past few weeks, Tory and Watson said.

Toronto has received around $600 million so far, and the second phase will require the city to apply for another $600 million. Ottawa has received about $75 million of $124.5 million it has been allocated. Both cities still face big shortfalls in their fiscal years – Ottawa’s is about $67 million, while Toronto’s could be around $300 million if it receives the $1.2 billion from the Safe Restart pool.

The mayors impressed upon Trudeau the need for future support, while thanking him for federal help to date.

“Justin Trudeau gets cities,” said Tory. Still, he said he “didn’t miss the opportunity to say we’d probably need to have something, albeit perhaps more modest, that would be called Safe Recovery 2.0 because in 2021 the pandemic will still be taking its toll.”

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

It’s ‘important we remember’: Remembrance Day services scaled back in Midland and Penetanguishene

Donate to the Poppy Campaign and watch Remembrance Day services from the safety of your own home.

That’s the advice of Dan Travers of the about this year’s services.

Legions across the country are grappling with how to proceed with the Poppy Campaign and Remembrance Day services while keeping veterans and the public safe from the risk of contracting COVID-19.

Details are to be worked out, but ceremonies will be held in Midland and Penetanguishene at the cenotaph for a small number of people.

The Midland Legion has partnered with Rogers TV Midland this year to live stream its Nov. 11 service.

“This year, safety and public health has to be our No. 1 priority. We are discouraging in-person attendance, but we are hoping as many people as possible can join us by livestream on Rogers,” said Travers.

The is planning on limiting the service to 25 essential people at the cenotaph, said president and District E Commander Paul Howe.

“Legionnaires, the Ladies’ Auxiliary and veterans representing the First World War, Second World War, Korea, Bosnia and Afghanistan — as long as we recognize those who have fought for our country, as long as we lay wreaths for the different wars, that’s the best we can do,” Howe said.

Travers said despite the changes this year, “It’s immensely important we do remember the individuals who served our country and died for our country and the freedom we enjoy today.”

This year, there will be no Remembrance Day church services, parade or after-service meal. No cadets, first responders or military will be invited to the service.

Wreaths can be purchased in advance, but there will no lineup of people placing wreaths. They will likely be placed before the service.

The Poppy Campaign remains a cash collection. Legion members are working on details to safely collect funds. Monies raised go to local veterans and their families, not to Legion operating funds.

Poppy Campaign donations can be made online and directed to local branches through the website at .

The Penetanguishene Legion is also selling poppy masks for $10.

‘Please, just make decisions based on the evidence’: Halton mayors lobby against expanding Stage 2 restrictions as COVID-19 hits new highs in Ontario

As Ontario hit a grim new milestone , leaders in some of the province’s harder-hit areas urged the provincial government not to impose more restrictions on regions that haven’t already been rolled back to Stage 2.

The province reported 978 new cases in its morning update, a single-day record that has also pushed Ontario’s rolling seven-day average to a pandemic-high 803 cases daily. Locally, the province reported 348 new cases in Toronto, 170 in Peel, 141 in York Region, 89 in Ottawa and 51 in Durham.

Meanwhile, open letters from politicians in Halton Region — one to and one to Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. David Williams — said the province shouldn’t impose new restrictions there. Earlier this month, the province imposed a return to a “modified Stage 2” in Toronto, Ottawa, Peel Region and York Region, all of which continue to see higher rates of infection than in Halton.

Halton’s showed an increase of 35 cases.

“A blanket approach that unfairly punishes small businesses with no explanation will hurt our local economy and impact buy-in from our residents,” said the letter to Ford, signed by mayors of four cities and towns in Halton, as well as regional chair Gary Carr.

The letter to Williams, meanwhile, demanded the release of being used when reinstating or lifting COVID-related restrictions.

“During the height of COVID-19, the majority of Ontarians accepted unprecedented restrictions in order to stop the spread and flatten the curve. Now, nearly seven months later the public is demanding more than just the blanket statement of ‘on the advice of medical experts,’ ” said the letter, signed by Carr, two mayors and a pair of Progressive Conservative MPPs.

Burlington mayor Marianne Meed Ward, who signed both letters, said the message to provincial officials was simple.

“Please, just make decisions based on the evidence,” Ward said in an interview.

Ward said she was hopeful the province wouldn’t roll Halton back to the modified Stage 2. The letter to Williams added that the region has taken a number of steps after York was rolled back to Stage 2 a week ago, including a ban on using municipal facilities for team sports and fitness classes.

“There is no evidence to suggest that moving Halton to a modified Phase 2 will have any meaningful impact on reducing case counts. One thing that is certain, is that many people and businesses cannot financially withstand another shutdown,” the letter added.

The mayor of Oshawa also urged the province not to clamp down in Durham Region, saying the economic toll would be disastrous, and unnecessary.

“I understand that everyone’s health and well-being has to be the top concern. But I just don’t think a return to Stage 2 is justified, based on the numbers,” Mayor Dan Carter said in an interview. “It would be devastating for the economy, especially in the restaurant industry.”

As of Saturday evening, Durham and Halton have the sixth- and seventh-highest rate of new cases per capita in the province, at 35 and 34 cases per 100,000 people per week, respectively.

In an email, Ford spokesperson Ivana Yelich defended the provincial government’s pandemic performance.

“While the numbers in Halton and other parts of the province are concerning, we are working very hard to control the spread of the virus as much as possible,” said Yelich, who also gave some broad details of which criteria are used in assessing regional COVID risk.

“These include COVID-19 spread and containment, public health capacity to conduct rapid case and contact management, the type and setting of outbreaks, incidence tracking, increases in hospitalization and ICU admission and testing capacity,” Yelich said. “As we have done in the past, we will continue to provide a clear account of the data and evidence if and when a region needs to be moved into modified Stage 2.”

Toronto General Hospital infectious disease specialist Dr. Isaac Bogoch suggested the province should wait another week before imposing restrictions on new areas, to see if the return to Stage 2 is working elsewhere.

“Next week will be crucial, because that’s when we’ll start to really see what kind of impact the restrictions brought in for Toronto and Peel will have. Right now, it’s still a bit too early to tell,” Bogoch said.

Jean-Paul Soucy, a University of Toronto PhD student in epidemiology and co-founder of the COVID-19 Canada Open Data Working Group, disagreed, saying the province should act sooner rather than later in regions like Halton and Durham.

“The earlier you act, the more your return is compounded,” he said.

Soucy also noted that Ontario’s numbers would likely have been higher sooner if the province hadn’t changed the testing system to be appointment-only earlier this month. Since then, the province has reported fewer completed tests daily on average.

“The fact that we’re seeing higher numbers like this despite the changes in testing is concerning,” Soucy said.

Josh Rubin is a Toronto-based business reporter. Follow him on Twitter:

Affordable housing coming to Bradford after Simcoe County approves land transfer

More affordable housing is coming to Bradford West Gwillimbury after a decision at the county level.

Simcoe County has approved the transfer of land from Bradford West Gwillimbury to the county and directed staff to move forward with the design of an affordable housing development.

The affordable housing project is a part of a larger redevelopment strategy for 7.2 hectares of town-owned property bounded by Simcoe Road to the west, Edward Street to the north and Marshview Boulevard to the south and east. 

The four-storey apartment building and parking lot will be built on nearly 1 hectare of land at the northeast corner of Simcoe Road and Marshview Boulevard.

The apartment building will contain about 50 units with one, two and three-bedroom rental apartments for families and seniors. It will be owned and managed by the Simcoe County Housing Corporation.

“I am very pleased that this project has come together because affordable housing is badly needed in BWG, where housing prices have continued to rise and rental units are scarce,” says Mayor Rob Keffer. “It’s an ideal location, close to downtown and to the GO Train station, as well as to our future civic campus where residents will be able to access a wide variety of services.”

Simcoe County council adopted its “Our Community 10-year Affordable Housing and Homelessness Prevention Strategy” in 2014. The strategy set a target of delivering at least 2,685 new affordable housing units throughout the region by 2024, which includes 202 units in Bradford.

Ten good news stories from Toronto Star headlines this week

We’ve got the goods for you.

From Halloween hijinks to Toronto dedicating a day to one of her native sons, we have compiled some of this week’s best good-news stories from thestar.com.

1.

We asked and you delivered! The Star put out a call for your photos of your creative costumes as you got ready to do your best to celebrate Halloween in 2020. And, boy, did you send us a pillowcase of fun!

2.

Dropping candy down a chute for little costumed Baby Sharks, Mulans and Black Panthers. Flinging full-size candybars to them via mini-catapults, “Game of Thrones” style, or with decorated slingshots. A favourite North American festivity is being tested by COVID-19. And people rose to the challenge for trick-or-treating that’s both safe and fun during a pandemic.

3.

An email from the Queen Mother Cafe proprietor Andre Rosenbaum, not sharing news of an impending closure, but instead its 42nd anniversary on Oct. 26, was comforting. At least for now one of the iconic spots that shaped people’s memories of Queen West is staying put.

4.

With more than a decade of screenwriting experience under his belt, the Canadian filmmaker behind comedies “This Is the End” and “Pineapple Express” is trying to expose youth from under-represented communities to the industry through Reel Start.

5.

Olufunke Asemota and her daughter lived in a shelter after arriving in Canada in December 2018. The single mother, originally from Nigeria, said she was a refugee claimant who didn’t know anyone in Canada and had no family to turn to for help.

But amid the “trauma (and) confusion,” she said, she met a friend who would introduce her to a training program that would turn her life around.

6.

It’s going to be a long winter, so we’re doing whatever it takes to add an extra dose of joy into daily life. Here are more things to make you happy. Hopefully they will bring you some joy too as we head into a week marking the start of daylight saving and the 2020 U.S. presidential election.

7.

After five years out of the TV spotlight, Jon Stewart will have his own show again.

Stewart, the former anchor of “The Daily Show,” has reached a deal to host a current-affairs series for Apple TV+, the company announced Tuesday.

8.

With love and pranks, Ian Paget and Chris Olsen are among millions of U.S. newbies looking to soak up social media stardom on TikTok. While they aren’t breakout stars like Nathan Apodaca (the guy with the cranberry juice and long board), they symbolize something else on TikTok. Their care for each other shines through for a range of supporters, from middle-age moms to LGBTQ youth struggling to come out.

9.

Mayor John Tory declared Saturday as “John Candy Day” to mark what would’ve been the actor’s 70th birthday. The mayor made the announcement on social media, saying, “It’s our way of remembering a beloved actor and comedian with roots in Toronto.”

10.

White rhinos are the second-largest land mammal and are an endangered species with a near-threatened status. The newborn’s birth on Sunday was a successful product of the Species Survival Plans overseen by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums to ensure the responsible breeding of endangered species.

Police seize cocaine, loaded handgun during early morning raid at Springwater home

Police seized $75,000 in drugs and a loaded handgun after officers searched a Springwater home Oct. 29.

Huronia West OPP officers executed an early morning search warrant in connection with an ongoing investigation.

About 500 grams of cocaine and 7,000 Percocet pills were found in the house along with a “large” amount of cash.

Three Springwater Township men and two Barrie women, all in their 20s, are charged with numerous firearm and drug trafficking offences. 

The three male suspects were held for bail court in Barrie.  

Olympian Hayley Wickenheiser urges Ontario’s gyms to switch to cohorts

Researchers behind a for containing workplace COVID-19 outbreaks say fitness facilities can use the same methods to avoid the fate of , a superspreader event that saw 54 primary cases of the virus last month. 

“We have been watching the situation unfold in Toronto around gyms and believe that the use of bubbles … would help the situation,” said Tyler Williamson, one of the nine authors of the Sept. 30 report,

Williams and his co-researchers argue in the report that the use of cohorts or “bubbles” in a workplace can limit potential outbreaks to a small number of employees as long as employees only interact with the people in their given cohort. 

If one member of a cohort becomes sick, everyone exposed within that cohort self-isolates while the rest of the workforce continues to work.

Hayley Wickenheiser, who earned four Olympic gold medals as a member of the Canadian women’s hockey team, is currently attending medical school in Toronto and co-authored the Sept. 30 study. She believes that fitness facilities in regions of Ontario not under red zone restrictions can apply the same cohorting principles in two ways: separation in space and separation in time. 

While cohorting in space – partitioning one gym into multiple separate facilities and dividing customers and staff between them – might only be feasible for large, open-concept gyms, she said virtually any fitness facility can implement some degree of cohorting in time.

“If you sequester people into time slots, and if you can get people into a more regular schedule without going across times, then you can kind of contain the number of interactions that are taking place between people and reduce the chance that a spreader event will take place over different groups,” she said.

Wickenheiser said gyms where people complete self-guided workouts could accomplish this by dividing operating hours into time slots and having clients sign up for a dedicated, unchangeable time slot each week, so that the same clients are reliably at the gym at the same time.

Facilities that offer pre-scheduled group classes could create more airtight cohorts by having clients commit to a specific class at the same time each week with the same instructor, without the ability to attend a different class. Instructors could be limited to teaching the same one or two classes each week. So if a client in one class tests positive for COVID-19, only that instructor’s one or two classes are potentially impacted, rather than the entire studio.

While this strategy would limit flexibility for staff and clients, Wickenheiser believes it’s worth it to provide the ability to prevent a facility-wide closure.

“We all have to be able to give up a little and sacrifice and if that’s what it takes to keep gyms going,” she said.

Chelsi Rodrigues owns and operates Whole Health Strength and Fitness, a small fitness centre in Cambridge. She believes the system Wickenheiser and her co-authors recommend should be workable for most gyms the size of hers.

“It’s not unrealistic, what they’re proposing,” she said. “At the end of the day, I don’t think anyone wants to get the virus.”

Rodrigues already offers scheduled fitness classes for up to 10 participants and uses a software application to keep track of everyone who enters the facility. None of her staff or clients have tested positive for COVID-19.

Her biggest challenge would be in staffing. Most of her trainers teach two classes per week, while her own class schedule is full. In order to further limit her contact with clients, she would need to hire additional staff.

“It would be more of a challenge for me because I’d have to step back and have them come in more,” she said.

Brian Fehst sits on the board of directors of the Ontario Society for Health and Fitness. He also believes sole-proprietor fitness centres might find it financially challenging to separate staff into cohorts, but said most would be willing to adopt the new strategy if it were ever mandated by public health.

“I think we’re already seeing a lot of acceptance of what the guidelines are and the facilities are really buying into it,” he said. “They’re saying, ‘This is important to protect our community health, so we’re going to be compliant.’”

For more information about the province’s COVID-19 guidelines for fitness facilities, visit .

OPP investigating mysterious explosion sound in Victoria Harbour

The Southern Georgian Bay OPP and Tay Township fire department are investigating what sounded like a loud explosion in Victoria Harbour, at about 12:30 a.m. on Nov. 6.

Residents around Maple Street, Park Street and George Street reported hearing an explosion, along with a bright, bluish light in the area of the Community Centre and Industrial Park. 

Responding officers patrolled the area without locating a scene or cause of the sound. 

Investigators were contacted after a building on the corner of Maple Street and Park Street was found to have incurred damage to its roof overnight.

Officers from the Office of the Ontario Fire Marshall are attending the scene to assist police with the ongoing investigation.

Anyone with knowledge or video footage of the incident is asked to contact the OPP at , or call Crime Stoppers at . 

Stayner’s Etched by Taylor creates personalized gifts

If you need an idea for that hard-to-shop-for someone, try gifting them something that’s personalized with their name.

Taylor Halliday from  can put your friend or family member’s name on almost anything — cheese board, casserole dish, coffee mug or ornament.

For $50, she’s offering a 2×8 personalized slate cheese board, three cheese knives and a cheese fork.

She can also personalize baby’s first Christmas ornament for you, at the cost of $25.

Halliday lives in Stayner and is able to work with you on perfecting your Christmas order.

Visit to see more ideas, or email .