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Motorcyclist from Sudbury area killed in crash near Beeton

One person is dead and another remains in hospital with serious injuries following a multi-vehicle crash that took place Nov. 9 on Tottenham Road, west of Beeton.

The crash happened around 11:22 a.m. at the

Police said three motorcycles were heading north on Tottenham Road when two of the bikes collided with a Nissan Pathfinder SUV that was heading south.

The cause of the collision is still under investigation.

One of the drivers of the motorcycles, 69-year-old Gaetan Guilmette, who is a resident of the Sudbury area, died at the scene. The driver of the second motorcycle, a 53-year-old Sudbury area woman, was airlifted to hospital in Toronto in serious condition.

Police said the third motorcycle was not involved in the crash.

The driver of the SUV, a 53-year-old woman, was transported to Stevenson Memorial Hospital with minor injuries.

The intersection was closed for several hours to allow the OPP’s collision reconstruction team to investigate.

There is no word on possible charges at this time.

‘We have to be in it together:’ Wasaga-area municipalities, businesses push ‘shop local’ message

It’s a good time to think outside the big-box and online stores.

While the temptation might be to head online for holiday shopping and avoid the headache of navigating stores in the midst of a pandemic, area municipalities and businesses urge the community to shop locally.

The year “2020 has been a rough ride for many folks, and we’re not through the thick of it,” said Tyler King, Wasaga Beach’s economic development officer.

The town’s message to the community is: It matters where you spend your money.

“Shopping from home and supporting large online retailers can be convenient, but there are consequences to the convenience,” he said. “Support local means more than just spending money in the backyard. Supporting local means investing in the community.”

The town has signs dotted throughout the community urging residents to support local businesses, and in July the economic development department launched an online portal which includes a business directory ().

Troy Disabato, who owns Torn Pages in Stayner, asks shoppers to check in with local businesses to see what they have in stock.

“Communication is a huge key … locals need to find out what’s in their community,” said Disabato, who adapted his business strategy in response to the pandemic, offering curbside service and in-town delivery.

Lisa Squire, who co-owns the Stayner Home Hardware with her husband John, said locals have been very supportive of businesses in the community throughout the pandemic.

She said her customers have also been very appreciative of the safety measures the store has put in place, such as limiting the number of people in the store and making sure touch points are sanitized.

“Customers feel safe, knowing that we are being careful,” she said. “On every level, safety of customers and staff is our No. 1 priority. We have too much to protect to make safety anything but first.”

King said spending money locally keeps it within the community.

“The temptation is to spend at large online retailers … but the consequences are that money doesn’t trickle down to local sports teams, into that charitable fundraiser, into local events and festivals,” he said. “The small and mid-sized businesses are not there just to support jobs and families, but they’re there to support the community and what makes it unique.”

And, said Disabato, it’s always good to check in with local store owners — if only to provide a mental-health boost.

“My regulars were reaching to me to ask if I was doing OK, can they still make requests for books. On a personal level, I knew there was still support,” he said. “Let a store owner know they’re doing a good job, thank them for respecting health guidelines.

“Let’s not lose that this is the season to be happy and respectful — let’s not lose that, even with the pandemic. It’s like the Three Musketeers, all for one and one for all — we have to be in it together.”


Story behind the story:  As we shift into the holiday season, Simcoe.com checked in with area businesses to talk about the importance of shopping locally.

‘My heart went out to them’: Students send messages of hope to seniors at Simcoe Manor in Beeton

Catholic school board trustee Janice Hutchison’s heart broke when she heard seniors at Simcoe Manor were back in isolation after a COVID-19 outbreak this month.

“Reading all of the reports and news articles and seeing our seniors — who are near and dear to our hearts — were quarantined to their rooms, my heart went out to them,” she said. “I thought how upsetting it must be that they aren’t even allowed to sit at a table and have a meal with somebody else.”

As a former volunteer at Simcoe Manor and a trustee, Hutchison came up with a solution.

“I have a school. All I did is sent a simple email to our principal, and she jumped all over it.”

Within days, students from all grades at Monsignor JE Ronan Catholic School in Beeton created a package of hundreds of cards and letters, with special messages to staff and seniors at Simcoe Manor.

“I didn’t expect that — it was jam-packed.”

The cards were stuffed into a large envelope and delivered to the residence, to be quarantined before being handed out to staff and residents.

Hutchison didn’t even peek inside to see the artwork.

“I didn’t want to compromise them.”

The week in COVID-19 vaccine news: Kids to the back of the line and cooling attitudes on mandatory shots

Considered one of the few ways to finally bring the pandemic under control, the search for a vaccine is moving fast.

Teams around the world are at work on dozens of candidates in the hopes that one of them — and possibly more — will crack the code in the coming months; passing clinical testing and gaining regulatory approval.

Thousands of people are already rolling up their sleeves for clinical testing, while debates over major issues are underway about issues such as who will get the vaccine first? How will it be distributed? How do we make sure the rest of the world isn’t left out?

From major developments to high-profile misses, here’s what Canadians need to know this week.

Kids may not get first round of vaccines

Once a vaccine is approved, the question remains: who gets it first?

While Canada’s guidelines to vaccine priorities are expected in coming weeks, other jurisdictions are already making their plans known. Many authorities, including the World Health Organization, have said that front-line health workers, the elderly and those who are immunocompromised should be at the front of the line.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) made headlines this week when they noted who shouldn’t go first: kids. This is a departure from say, flu shots, which experts almost always recommend for children.

But CDC officials noted that kids rarely have severe COVID-19 symptoms and none of the leading vaccine candidates are yet testing on underage subjects so the vaccine may not be recommended for them at first.

However, , Pfizer Inc. plans to enrol children as young as 12 in their late stage tests, while AstraZeneca plans to trial a small group of children between five and 12.

Read more:

Two more vaccines apply for Canadian regulatory approval

And then there were three: three experimental vaccines seeking the green light for use in Canada.

Two more vaccine candidates have begun the regulatory process here: Pfizer Canada, working with German biotechnology company BioNTech, and Massachusetts-based Moderna Therapeutics Inc. both submitted applications this week.

was the first company to take this step in early October.

It’s ultimately Health Canada’s call which vaccines are approved for use here, and it’s important to note that approval isn’t guaranteed and even in a best-case scenario is still a way off.

A major reason why? None of these vaccines have even finished clinical trials yet. In normal times researchers would have to wait until they had those final results before hauling their paperwork over to the scientists at Health Canada.

But thanks to the Minister of Health’s interim order, rolled out last month and designed to speed up the approval process for all things related to COVID, all three companies are able to do what’s called a rolling submission, where they’ll just hand results to Health Canada scientists as they go, who can, in turn, make suggestions or ask questions.

The hope is that this’ll make it much faster to get final regulatory approval, which usually takes almost a year after clinical trials wrap up.

Read more:

Vaccine before the U.S. election increasingly unlikely

Pfizer said Friday it could file as early as late November for authorization of its vaccine in the United States, in what’s called an emergency use application, which is when an unapproved drug is allowed because it’s a public health emergency.

In an posted online, chairman and CEO Albert Bourla outlined the timelines and safety milestones the company is aiming for. While this timeline could put Pfizer ahead of competitors, the announcement casts further doubt upon U.S. President Donald Trump’s promise to have a vaccine ready to go before the Nov 3. election.

Last month, the heads of nine biopharmaceutical companies — including Pfizer — banded together in a pledge to uphold “the integrity of the scientific process” and insist that their vaccines would not be rushed, in an bid to assure the public of an eventual vaccine’s safety.

Read more:

Testing halted on a major vaccine candidate

Johnson & Johnson has had to pause late-stage clinical testing of its vaccine candidate after a study participant came down with an “unexplained illness.” They’re now trying to figure out if that illness is related to the vaccine or not.

The company, which has signed an advance purchase agreement with Canada, said in a statement that some adverse reactions are an “” of a clinical trial, and experts generally agree that these situations — where a study is immediately shut down and an investigation begun — show the safeguards built into the vaccine development process.

Janssen, the company’s pharmaceutical arm, isn’t the first major player forced to take this step, either.

Last month, testing on the vaccine candidate being developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University was also halted after a woman developed a rare inflammation of the spinal cord called transverse myelitis.

Testing has now restarted at many of their testing sites but remains on hold in the United States, where officials continue to examine whether there’s a safety risk.

Read more:

COVAX gets major boost

The international effort to get countries around the world to work together on a COVID-19 vaccine (and make sure poorer countries aren’t left out in the process) got a major boost this week, with the news that China was signing on.

China had initially missed the September deadline to sign onto what is known as COVAX, but a government official said late last week that they were on board after all.

“We are taking this concrete step to ensure equitable distribution of vaccines, especially to developing countries, and hope more capable countries will also join and support COVAX,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying .

Organized by the Gavi Vaccine Alliance, an organization that attempts to get vaccines to kids in poorer countries, COVAX was designed to do two major things. The first is to function as a global pool of vaccines — richer countries are able to combine their money, invest in a bunch of different vaccines, and then share the pre-purchased doses of any successful candidates.

But there’s a second, critical piece to this: COVAX also raises money as fast as it can so that countries who can’t afford to buy in can participate anyway. A lot of advocates are worried that without this effort, poor countries will be left out, with vaccines going to the highest bidder.

Canadian federal politicians have long said they’re big fans of COVAX, and the federal government has invested a total of $440 million — half of which is to buy vaccines for Canadians, and half of which is to support doses for poorer countries.

However, major players like the U.S. and India have chosen not to join and instead are prioritizing their own vaccine needs. So, as a big global fish, China signing on is a major show of support for the global effort.

While it’s not clear how much exactly China is contributing, officials have said they plan to buy vaccine doses for one per cent of their population through COVAX.

Read more:

Canadians cooling on mandatory vaccines

Support for making an eventual vaccine mandatory seems to be cooling, according to a by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies released this week.

While the majority of respondents in earlier polls said they were in favour of the government making people get inoculated, the new poll found only 39 per cent of those surveyed though it should be mandatory.

That’s a decline of 18 percentage points from a similar poll in July. Just over half now say a vaccine should be voluntary.

The online poll was conducted from Oct. 9 to 11 and surveyed 1,539 adult Canadians. It cannot be assigned a margin of error because internet-based polls are not considered random samples.

Read more:

With files from The Canadian Press and Associated Press

Why talking about COVID-19’s ‘comorbidities’ is so controversial

As the head of a small congregation in rural Saskatchewan, Bradley Robertson hears his fair share of community chatter about COVID-19 — from those who fear the virus, to those who say it’s all blown out of proportion.

He always thought it was important to use his platform to encourage others to keep themselves and their neighbours safe from the virus. When his sister got sick with it back in Vancouver, the threat became all the more real.

“There are those who are saying: Why are we placing such a big deal on this?” Robertson said. “And I’m thinking, the numbers have been low, because we’ve been mostly responsible. Now they’re on the rise again.”

“As leaders, we have to take responsibility.”

The disagreements Robertson noticed are happening all over the country, with some escalating into widespread and emotional debates over our lives, personal responsibilities and the role of government in reigning in the pandemic.

That’s what has happened in the case of Alberta’s reporting on comorbidities, an issue that comes layered with the kind of nuance that can be in rare supply during an emotionally charged national conversation during a pandemic.

Comorbidities are pre-existing health conditions ranging from high blood pressure to cancer.

In Alberta, comorbidities appear to have made 98 per cent of the 575 people who have died from COVID-19 more vulnerable to the disease.

Last month, the province began listing comorbidities alongside its .

Ontario and B.C. have not followed suit.

Experts agree this is crucial information to know, to reveal more about the toll the coronavirus pandemic is taking on society, and to help plan when it comes to things such as distributing vaccines to at-risk groups.

However, the question of comorbidities has also fuelled a narrative that has led some Canadians to question the need for severe public health measures to limit the spread of COVID-19 within the general population.

And that narrative has public health officials concerned.

The thinking, promoted by commentators and Twitter users in Alberta and across the country, goes something like this: When we look at the COVID-19 death data, the vast majority of people who have died have some kind of comorbidity. Those without comorbidities appear to be at far less risk (of death, although far less is known about the long-term effects of COVID-19). So, some of those people without comorbidities should be able to make personal choices to accept the risk of getting COVID-19, and do things like keep small businesses open, and socialize with loved ones. One commentator has repeatedly referred to only 10 “otherwise healthy” people in Alberta dying of COVID-19.

Public health experts and leaders have contested this in no uncertain terms, with the federal health minister calling it a “dangerous” way of thinking. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said last week in the House of Commons that a storyline distinguishing between protecting people with comorbidities from the rest of the population “downplayed” the seriousness of the pandemic’s losses.

The complicating factor is that, while this narrative is concerning to public health officials, it is not based on falsehoods. Comorbidity data does, in fact, paint a picture of parts of the population that are at much greater risk of death than others.

So is it dangerous to focus on comorbidities?

“Severe outcomes are not limited to just those who are at the very end of their lives, and it is a mistake to think so,” Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s chief medical officer of health, said in a daily update last month.

“Over half of men over 50 in Alberta have high blood pressure.

“That should not be a death sentence.”

A Saskatchewan-based blogger tweeted about the release of comorbidity data in Alberta, calling it a “cynical effort to somehow minimize or diminish these deaths.”

The tweet received support from high-profile public health experts in Alberta, including Dr. Lynora Saxinger, who co-chairs the province’s scientist advisory group on COVID-19.

Patrick Saunders-Hastings, a University of Ottawa epidemiologist, said the dangers of highlighting comorbidities lie in the way the information is communicated, not the facts, themselves.

First, there’s the risk of downplaying the deaths that have occurred by suggesting, even implicitly, that they were not as attributable to COVID-19 because of the accompanying risk factors.

That’s not true, because it was COVID-19 that killed these people, not their comorbidities.

Then there’s the issue of the message the emphasizing of comorbidities sends to those feeling apathetic about the pandemic and its restrictions.

“There have been challenges around the communication of risk profiles as it relates to individual responsibility,” Saunders-Hastings said.

“We have seen younger and healthier population groups who have been less willing to comply with (public health orders and recommendations).”

On the extreme ends of that non-compliance are events such as the Calgary last weekend, which saw hundreds of Albertans take to the streets, in defiance of public health orders, to protest public health restrictions. Or the now well-known case of Adam Skelly, who kept his Etobicoke barbecue restaurant open, despite public health orders, before being shut down.

Even comparatively minor flouting of the rules, such as going to visit a few friends and their house, is misguided, Saunders-Hastings said.

“The risk cohorts that have been identified related to COVID-19 are so broad that, even in those younger, otherwise healthy, groups, most people would have interaction with people with those risk factors,” he said.

Comorbidities for COVID-19 deaths in Canada include high blood pressure, dementia, and diabetes, all fairly common conditions.

Advanced age is also a known risk factor for severe COVID-19.

That means practically everyone in the population is in contact with someone who has a comorbidity, even if they do not have any themselves.

For many Canadians, it’s a deeply personal topic.

“I hear from Canadians, they call me to talk about a family member who has an underlying condition and they’re concerned,” said Colin Furness, a University of Toronto epidemiologist. “There’s emotional pain there.”

When Lethbridge MP Rachael Harder shared a Toronto Sun column to her Facebook page, quoting the line about only 10 “otherwise healthy” COVID-19 deaths, the backlash was swift. Almost 1,000 comments followed the article, and most appeared to be people criticizing the MP for a lack of sensitivity toward those hundreds with comorbidities who died in her province.

She edited the original post with more quotes from the column, saying it’s important to protect the most vulnerable in the pandemic.

“At the end of the day, I’m simply posting an article that presents to the Canadian public the stats,” Harder told the Star. “The stats show who the most vulnerable are.”

She repeated the same thing when asked whether she thought her post promoted the view that focusing on comorbidities could encourage those not at risk to argue for fewer restrictions.

Robertson, the pastor in Eastend, Sask., is from the same area as Harder, and said he was one of the people disappointed by the thinking Harder seemed to promote with her Facebook post. He said he was glad to see her update the original post with what he thought was more compassion for those at risk.

“At the time, my sister was going through treatment in a Vancouver hospital for COVID-19 and she was touch-and-go for getting intubated,” Robertson said. “I felt that those numbers were being dismissed. It’s almost feeding the people who are saying ‘this is all nonsense’ about the pandemic.”

In his small town, Robertson says he comes across people who feel differently about the measures to stop the spread of COVID-19; some are more supportive of the measures than others.

“I try to encourage others who are listening to think about people who are vulnerable, so, even if you don’t agree, or, even if you think you’re not at risk, still wear a mask and follow the rules,” he said.

Reporting on comorbidities is an important piece of the puzzle, especially as we approach a vaccination phase of the pandemic.

“Understanding that we will not be able to vaccinate everyone right away … we would need to make these prioritization decisions,” said Saunders-Hastings. “And that’s in these at-risk groups.”

“That’s not to dismiss the risk of younger and otherwise healthy individuals, but we have a need to allocate those resources to health workers and people at risk of transmitting to high-risk individuals,” he said.

Vaccines are expected to begin arriving in Canada in early 2021, with about three million doses expected in the first three months, in a population of about 38 million people.

Alex McKeen is a Vancouver-based reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Daniel Masin seeks Simcoe North Conservative nomination

Another resident has entered into the competition to replace long-time Simcoe North MP Bruce Stanton.

Daniel Masin, a 57-year-old mortgage broker, is seeking the Conservative Party nomination in advance of the next federal election.

“I’m at the stage in my life where I want to give back to the community. I want to make a positive difference,” said Masin, who currently splits his time between Toronto and Penetanguishene. “I love the area. In my heart, (Simcoe north) is where my home is.”

Masin has been involved in politics since the 1970s. He’s campaigned for mayors, MPPs and MPs. After assisting politicians for decades, he finally wants to run for office and “serve the people.”

“As a mortgage broker, we put our clients’ interests first,” said Masin. “MPs put a constituent’s needs or interests first. That’s what they are elected to do – serve the public.”

He will have to get through a process first. Masin will need to be interviewed and secure party approval before he can throw his hat into the ring as an official candidate.