By: Brian Zinchuk, Local Journalism Initiative reporter, Estevan Mercury
Regina– If you know what you’re doing, it is possible to occasionally finagle a sixth COVID-19 dose out of a vial made by Pfizer labelled “five doses.” Now Pfizer has asked Health Canada to label its vials as having six doses, and Health Canada agreed.
But that doesn’t mean that all those very same vials now magically have a full six doses, and that’s a concern for Premier Scott Moe. He was asked about this on Feb. 11 during his regular COVID-19 briefing at the Legislature. The briefing had already been punctuated by some exasperation with, and hard choices resulting from, the lack of sufficient quantities of the vaccine.
Moe said, “I was vocal about those concerns as well. I believe we’re able to get the sixth set of the Pfizer bottles, about half the time if I’m not mistaken, a bit more than half of the time, so, you know, I understand, with some additional, some different equipment such as syringes, that should increase. But we must also understand that, you know, these are these are humans, that are out trying to get every drop out of these out of these vaccine bottles as they possibly can, and my hat’s off to the folks that have been doing it thus far. We’re a little bit up over 100 per cent of our delivery rate here today, and I thank them for their very efficient efforts in getting there.
“But we have not been able to get all six doses out of each and every vial, and I’m concerned that we will not get all six doses out of each and every vial. I had voiced my concern to the prime minister and and to media, previously, that they should consider keeping it at five doses quite honestly, because it provides more access to more doses for Canadians. Here’s why: as they change from five to six doses Canada’s vials shipments will drop; we will get less vials in Saskatchewan and across Canada with the expectation that we will get six doses out of each vial.
“It isn’t that way in other areas of the world. In the US, when they changed from five doses to six doses on their vial, they continued to receive the same number of vials, thereby increasing the doses that they were making available to Americans. So, that is problematic, and I had voiced that concern with the CEO of Pfizer Canada when I talked to him. But I understand that Health Canada has now made this change, and we await the delivery of the needles. My understanding is Health Canada has also, or the federal government, has procured I believe 77 million needles or syringes that they will make available to the provinces. We’re expecting delivery of those later this week, or early next week. And we will do our best to extract every dose of vaccine out of those vials that we possibly can. But this is an error and likely will result in less doses for Canadians in the first quarter,” he said.
Year: 2021
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Is it five, or six doses per vial of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine?
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Halton among 27 Regions Moving to Framework
By: Laura Steiner
Halton Region is among 27 regions returning to the province’s COVID19 reopening framework Tuesday February 16, 2021. The announcement was made by Health Minister Christine Elliott earlier this afternoon.
“The health and safety of Ontarians remains our number one priority. While we are cautiously and gradually transitioning some regions out of shutdown with the risk of new variants this is not a reopening or a return to normal,” Elliott said. Toronto, Peel, North-Bay Parry Sound, and York will remain under a stay-at-home order until February 22, 2021.
Halton will enter the “Red or control zone.” This is described on the province’s website as implementing broader restrictions across multiple sectors to control transmission.” Everyone is strongly advised to continue staying at home, avoid social gatherings, only travel between regions for essential purposes and limit close contacts to your household,” Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. David Williams said. Red is the last step before widescale closures. The designations will be in place for two weeks.
The province has introduced a new “emergency brake” mechanism. This would allow each region’s Chief Medical of Health to move a region to grey in order to prevent large-scale transmission. Retail will be allowed under all designations, with limits on capacity for stores.
Modelling data released yesterday indicates there cases could start increase towards the end of this month thanks to contagious variants. Halton recorded an increase of 26 cases as of today with 5 of these coming from Milton. The region has recorded the first case of the UK strain of COVID19.
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Caledon Councillors Take Measures to wrestle plan control from Peel Region
By: Isaac Callan, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Pointer
Boxed in and frustrated Caledon councillors have voted to send a hail mary motion to the provincial government, to put major planning decisions in the hands of local council, instead of the Region of Peel.
On January 19, Caledon Ward 2 Councillor Johanna Downey tabled a motion asking Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Steve Clark to create a new sub-area chapter under the Places to Grow Act for Peel. The motion, and its supporters, suggests the move would allow Caledon more autonomy over broad planning decisions that are normally subject to regional approval.
Places to Grow is the legislation that sets out population density and other targets for Southern Ontario, to manage the ongoing influx of new residents who settle in Canada’s largest region every year.
Since it took effect 15 years ago, Caledon has been criticized for failing to conduct its growth planning in a smart and sustainable way, instead choosing a haphazard approach to development, which regional councillors have fought against. The excessive costs of Caledon’s planning, which allows subdivisions to be built in the middle of nowhere, are largely borne by Mississauga and Brampton taxpayers.
Regional council and Caledon council have disagreed fiercely about how Peel’s largest geographical municipality, with a fraction of the population, should grow in the coming decades.
Council members from the two cities have accused Caledon of eschewing smart-growth principles under the provincial legislation in favour of policies driven by developers and other political interests.
Caledon Mayor Allan Thompson has been criticized for pushing planning decisions that will cost taxpayers excessive amounts because the lack of infrastructure around proposed developments means underground and other utilities, roads and services such as paramedics, policing and public health have to be spread out across far flung areas.
Thompson sold his own family land in the isolated southwest corner of Caledon to a developer for more than $9 million and has aggressively pushed approval for development in the area, despite little infrastructure and services to support it.
Instead, the Region of Peel and its council members have stripped Caledon of some local planning authority and have pushed for denser growth that is adjacent to existing development where infrastructure already exists and would therefore cost far less. This is generally how planning is done across the GTA.
During last week’s town council meeting, Downey said that “political decisions” were hampering Caledon’s planning. “I think we have seen inequity and, quite frankly, undue influence at the regional table when it comes to our planning matters,” she said, suggesting recent regional moves were blocking Caledon’s potential for smart growth.
In the past, the Town has been warned by its own planners, officials at the Region, provincial experts and appeals tribunals that it cannot keep planning for unsustainable sprawl that does not fit regional and provincial policy.
In 2015, Caledon members at the Region walked out of a council meeting when Mississauga and Brampton councillors first attempted to strip the smaller municipality of authority over its own planning, after many expressed concern it was not following the Province’s growth plan.
On another issue, equally incompatible with smart growth, most Caldeon council members including Thompson, support the Province’s plans to resurrect the GTA West Highway. The massive 400-series corridor was scrapped in 2018 by the Liberals, after an expert panel found it would do almost nothing to solve congestion and risked propagating further environmentally devastating sprawl. Advocates determined to save the Greenbelt, which the highway would encroach upon, are trying to force the Doug Ford PC government to drop its current plan to build the highway along a route it approved in the summer.
It’s another controversial planning issue most Caledon council members have taken a stand on, raising questions about their commitments to smart growth and environmentally sustainable development.
In July, frustrated after it lost another regional vote, Caledon was granted a Ministerial Zoning Order (MZO) by Clark to move forward with the ROPA34 development, for lands around Chinguacousy Road and Mayfield Road. The move circumvented the will of Peel Region in favour of Caledon, which once again pushed development that made little sense to Peel’s policy makers. Meanwhile, Mississauga and Brampton taxpayers will have to pay for the lion’s share of extra infrastructure costs.
Less than half-a-year later, Caledon again wrote to Clark. A vote that led to the Town losing two seats at the regional table, giving them to Brampton, caused consternation among local councillors who asked the Province to extend the review period for the Region’s decision to restructure council composition, which was constrained by the timing of the next provincial and municipal elections in 2022.
Brampton, with a population of 650,000, had argued it deserved more than seven seats and that Caledon, with about 90,000 residents, should not have five seats.
Clark responded and granted Caledon’s request to extend the time period to make the decision on regional council composition, but Peel councillors proceeded anyway prior to the new year and made the move to give Brampton nine seats at the Region, while Caledon will only have three.
The decision sparked anger among most Caledon members who characterized the move as a political ploy to strip the town of authority.
Last week, Caledon councillors again asked Minister Clark, who oversees 444 separate municipalities, to give them a hand.
The approved motion for a special planning designation was built on a precedent set in 2012, when the Province created a sub-area chapter in its planning legislation to deal with Simcoe County. A series of specific circumstances were set out to govern how Simcoe would grow and where new settlements would pop-up in an area dominated by relatively small towns..
At the time, the Simcoe move was met with opposition from environmentalists, who suggested it went against the principles of Ontario’s smart growth aspirations. Environmental Defence and Friends of the Greenbelt both suggested the plan would be problematic and lead to costly sprawl, including leapfrog development. They feared far-flung new settlements would create more car-dependent communities and the need for roads across sensitive land.
“In terms of conflicts with the Growth Plan, the Simcoe strategy essentially proposes the creation of employment areas along Highway 400 in locations that are not adjacent to existing communities,” Ray Tomalty (Ph.D.) and Bartek Komorowski (MUP) wrote in a 2011 paper published by Friends of the Greenbelt. “Creating employment areas away from residential uses and other services run counter to the Growth Plan’s emphasis on creating complete communities.”
In Caledon, the Town’s tri-nodal approach — planning growth in three separate areas of the huge municipality simultaneously — could be characterized in the same way.
Physically larger than Toronto, critics have pointed out that growth planning in Caledon set for the southwest corner, the east around Bolton and close to the middle, makes no sense. Disconnected infrastructure including utilities, municipal services and other needs have to be provided in each area, instead of building around one dense, urban centre, which would cost far less and would prevent long travel times even for the most basic tasks, such as shopping or visiting the doctor.
Caledon’s sprawling, disjointed approach, makes everything from transit planning to the construction of schools and healthcare a major headache. GO Transit services, for example, can’t be built in each of the three areas, but they could be expanded around Bolton, the only urban area in Caledon, and the place where planners have tried to direct future growth.
Instead, it means three geographically distant places all require significant investment to support new housing and employment.
Exactly what the Town actually wants from its most recent request is unclear. Supporters and critics of the motion agreed last Tuesday it was vague and that they didn’t want to copy the Simcoe sub-area chapter, just the process.
“The Simcoe-sub area chapter also does not provide lower-tier municipalities with explicit authority on growth management over the upper-tier municipalities,” a spokesperson for the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing told The Pointer, making reference to the “unique circumstances” around the Simcoe sub-area. “Lower-tier municipalities are required to conform with the official plan of the upper-tier municipality.”
Caledon Ward 5 Councillor Annette Groves called the motion “premature” and described it as putting the “cart before the horse — again”. She pointed to the lack of financial studies done by staff and limited comparisons to the Simcoe situation.
Her Ward 1 colleague, Ian Sinclair, also raised key questions about the motion. In each instance, staff were only able to provide vague answers about the thrust of the move, not specifics.
“I don’t understand how this proposed maneuver under the Growth Plan is going to help us,” Sinclair said, pointing to the detail in the Simcoe plan and its unique collection of small municipalities. “The motion talks about the quality and control of local planning matters, but I don’t know what you mean by local planning matters. Does that mean community design? It seems to be silent on the big issue of servicing costs and major roads.”
Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie expressed her disapproval of the motion in response to questions from The Pointer. “This is completely counter to the Regional Planning system outlined by the Province,” she said. “The motion also leaves critical questions unanswered, most notably whether Caledon would still expect the Region of Peel to pay for necessary infrastructure such as roads, water and wastewater treatment. I know my residents wouldn’t be happy having to help pay for Caledon’s infrastructure expenses without Mississauga elected officials having a say in how that community is planned and developed.”
Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown did not respond to a request for comment.
An archived portion of the Province’s website contains a series of frequently asked questions about the Simcoe sub-area amendment. It explains that the process toward creating a sub-area began in 2010 to provide “more specific direction for municipalities in Simcoe County and the cities of Barrie and Orillia, to implement the Growth Plan.”
A year later, in November 2011, the Provincial Development Facilitator, who mediates when complex local planning issues arise, provided advice on the sub-area, after 59 meetings with representatives of Simcoe’s 16 municipalities. The provincial spokesperson described the process as involving “extensive consultation” and added that “policies related to the Simcoe sub-area are intended to eventually transition sub-area municipalities towards applying the general A Place to Grow policies as they developed and strengthened their internal processes and capabilities.” The comments suggest a significantly different situation when comparing Simcoe and Peel.
Despite its frustrations, Caledon has benefitted from overrepresentation at the regional table for years. Even with its reduced seat number of councillors, Caledon remains overrepresented per capita in Peel Region. It also benefits from pooled regional tax dollars that contribute to roads, wastewater, drinking water, public health, paramedic services and other services.
When Mississauga tried to separate from the Region of Peel in 2019 it was Caledon and Brampton that opposed the move. “Quite frankly, this motion plays right into the hands of Mississauga,” Groves said Tuesday.
“I think we have to mount a very serious campaign against this,” Mississauga Ward 5 Councillor Carolyn Parrish told her city colleagues last week. She said Wards 3 and 4 Councillor Martin Medeiros, who is chair of Brampton’s planning committee, was pushing the same rallying cry in Brampton.
“Is the Caledon motion a cry for help? More the dramatic continuation of a theme,” she told The Pointer. “They have been consistently building the case at Queen’s Park that they are being bullied by Mississauga, in particular, and Brampton as well. So this reinforces the damsel in distress theme.”
Parrish said she was disappointed to see the move come after attempts to increase Caledon’s voice during the Region’s official plan review. “My particular disappointment with Downey’s motion comes from the fact that, as Chair of Regional Planning, I have bent over backwards to ensure Caledon has equal representation on the newly formed Planning Committee,” she added.
With the motion passed by Caledon, the decision is now in the hands of Minister Clark. A Peel Region meeting Thursday will focus on the 2021 budget, meaning it is unclear if Parrish, Medeiros or any Caledon councillors will raise the issue.
“We might as well go on our own,” Groves added. “We might as well tell the Region, tell the Province, that we don’t want to be part of Peel Region anymore.” -
Guelph/ Eramosa Fire Chief also making progress in ovarian cancer research
By: Keegan Kozolanka, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, GuelphToday.com
There’s likely few people who have the same set of responsibilities as Jim Petrik.
The Eden Mills resident balances cancer research at the Ontario Veterinary College with duties as chief of the Guelph Eramosa Fire Department.
Petrik said his time with U of G started after he completed his PhD in molecular cell biology and became a professor in 1999.
At this same time, he ended up in a stable living situation and found himself able to dedicate more of his time to helping the community.
“It was something I always wanted to do so I signed onto the volunteer fire department and started as a volunteer firefighter in 1999 as well,” Petrik said.
He’s has had success in both fields.
Petrik explained his lab is working on therapies for women with advanced stage ovarian cancer that could go to clinical trial in the next year depending on funding.
Although cautiously optimistic, he called this a potential game changer as therapy options for ovarian cancer patients haven’t changed much in 40 years.
“It’s such a difficult disease to deal with, typically it’s not detected until late stage when therapeutic options are somewhat reduced,” Petrik explained.
“In our pre-clinical models some were able to reverse advanced metastatic disease and leave some animals disease-free.”
He has also climbed the ranks at the Rockwood fire hall from firefighter to captain to deputy chief and a year ago became the first chief of the Guelph Eramosa Fire Department, a position previously covered by the Guelph Fire Department.
At a glance, both seem like wildly different roles, but Petrik said in some ways they’re not.
Both have direct impacts to people but differ in timeline
“We’re really excited we may have a real significant impact on the lives of cancer patients but the reality of it is those things take a long time,” Petrik said.
“Whereas in the fire service, if we respond to someone that’s in a car accident and we extricate them from the car, we’ve had a positive impact on their day immediately. I love the dichotomy of that.”
There’s also parallels to foster talent in others through leadership.
Petrik sees his role in both situations as creating an environment that lets people achieve their maximum potential.
“We have amazing people in the fire department…they’re selfless people, they devote their time to come and help their community.” Petrik said.
“Similarly in the research lab, I write grants and fortunately we’ve been very successful in getting grant funding to run the lab. So my job is to create the resources that allow my extremely talented grad students to work in the lab and work on these novel therapies.”
He said people are sometimes surprised to hear he holds these two roles on top of being a father to four boys, with comments that he must be very busy.
Petrik gives credit to his wife Nicole for shouldering the load when he has to attend to a call.
“She understands that people are having a really serious issue and they’re relying on us to come do it,” Petrik said, extending his thanks to all the firefighter spouses who he thinks don’t get enough recognition.
“The sacrifices they made are not trivial for us to be able to go out and help the community and we just drop whatever we are doing.” -
Aurora student takes income inequality to Freeland
By: Brock Weir, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Source: The Auroran
Shyam Subramanyam has always had a passion for helping Canadians close the income gap.
It is an issue the Aurora student has tackled as a Grade 10 in the Global Leadership Program at Newmarket’s Pickering College, and, on Friday, it was an issue he took directly to Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland.
Last week, Shyam was selected by Marc de la Bastide, Pickering College’s Co-Curricular Director, to take part in a Student Budget Consultation with Ms. Freeland and eleven other students from across Ontario hosted by CIVIX, a non-partisan organization dedicated to building active and engaged citizenship among young Canadians.
It was a chance for teens to speak directly to the decision-makers on the issues that matter to them and, for Shyam, the issue he wanted to bring to the Deputy Prime Minister’s attention was clear.
“I feel too often the youth don’t get their voice,” he says. “We are so focused and everybody talks about how the youth are the future, the youth should be prepared to take on the world because, after the next generation leaves, it is up to us to do this. If we don’t have a voice and we don’t get a say in what we want to do now, there is no point in doing that. One of the most important things [teacher Joshua] Armstrong told me was about the environment. There is so much we need to do to create jobs, we need youth to study well, but there is no point if you don’t have an environment to live in. You can’t have a home if your house is on fire.
“Each of us had about two minutes [and I thought] ‘what’s the best way I could encapsulate all my thoughts?’ I was thinking about rising house prices, the rising cost of tuition and student loans, and I was also thinking about the environment. How can I, as a student, express all these issues into one topic? That is why I decided on income inequality and the future of our youth. Through this, I was able to mention the growing concerns of debt and the main ideas that I actually ended up suggesting were plans to reduce the cost of tuition and increase financial aid to offer more education-based opportunities. Furthermore, I also suggested a new plan where the government actually gives the banks more financial support to offer lower mortgages, lower interest rate mortgages for university students that have just graduated, allowing them to actually build generational wealth through acquiring assets such as homes.”
Speaking his mind on the topic, Shyam said he found a Deputy Prime Minister who was “so receptive and understanding” on the issues close to students’ hearts.
“She gave us all respect and she treated us as if we were other Members of Parliament; she didn’t treat us like we were children, she treated us like we were equals and I though that was completely evident in the way she would give feedback.”
For teachers, Shyam’s enthusiasm to participate in public life came as no surprise. In fact, it was one of the main reasons he stood out as a prime student to put forward for this opportunity.
“As a faculty member, to hear one of our students articulate what is going on with the budget process really means a lot to me because this is the type of student and type of character we’re looking to build at Pickering College,” says Mr. Armstrong, Shyam’s academic advisor. “As someone who teaches civics and social sciences, these are issues that we care about, giving the kids an opportunity to articulate.
“Being a global leader and making changes in the world around you [is about] being able to understand how things work so that you know the different places in society you can get involved in and make change, and to be open to sit and listen and understand new perspectives. Shyam walked out of that meeting and he understood [from other students’ presentations] things about the North and broadband [in Indigenous communities] that maybe he never would have had the opportunity to understand.”
Indeed, the issue of broadband in remote communities has provided Shyam with plenty of food for thought.
“For me, during these past few weeks of learning from home, I have been able to log onto school from 8.30 a.m. until school ends without any worries of my Wi-Fi cutting out. I can access all the material, high speed, high quality, I am able to perform to the best of my ability. However, there are so many communities that don’t have access to this and it is really hindering their ability to succeed in this pandemic world.
“I believe that in every single person there’s an ounce of greatness, but for that greatness to come out, like sapping a tree, we need to give them the opportunities and the chances for them to actually shine. I feel like I want to do more advocacy and more research into the actual implications of income and what policy changes we can make to offer more educational opportunities and to help people reach their best potential.” -
Security head warns of threats to Canada from China and others
By: Lynn Desjardins
Singling out China, Canada’s spy chief said the greatest threat to national security comes from hostile activities by foreign states. In a speech to a non-partisan think tank, David Vigneault, director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) said technology has enabled foreign interests to steal intellectual property and advanced research from vital areas including Canada’s biopharma and health sector, artificial intelligence, quantum computing, ocean technology, and aerospace sectors.
He added that this has caused “significant harm” to Canadian companies which jeopardizes Canada’s knowledge-based economy. Other countries do not play by the traditional rules of private commerce, putting countries that do at a disadvantage. “This is state capitalism and it creates a skewed playing field in which our private sector is always at a disadvantage,” he said.Chinese proxies threaten citizens in Canada
Vigneault also noted harm to individuals who have been threatened by Chinese proxies in Canada and other countries. Sometimes individuals face threats that families who remain in China will be affected and they may not be aware that they can turn to Canadian authorities for help.
Vigneault was careful to say that the threat does not come from the Chinese people but from the Government of China which “is pursuing a strategy for geopolitical advantage on all fronts – economic, technological, political, and military – and using all elements of state power to carry out activities that are a direct threat to our national security and sovereignty. We all must strengthen our defences.”Covert efforts said to seek to ‘undermine our democracy’
Vigneault said that Canada has always faced foreign interference but that its scale, speed and impact have increased because of globalization and technology. Social media are used to spread disinformation or leverage efforts to divide public opinion, interfere in healthy public debate and create social tensions. He expressed concerns that foreign states target politicians, political parties and electoral processes in order to covertly influence Canadian public policy, public opinion “and ultimately undermine our democracy.” He added that efforts by foreign interests have accelerated during the pandemic and will continue as Canada emerges from it.
Vigneault lamented the 1984 law which governs CSIS saying greatly impedes the ability of the agency to counter international threats. Specifically, he mentioned that it impedes the ability to use modern tools and assess data and information. He calls for the law to be updated and for all sectors of Canadian society to work with the agency to counter Canada’s security threats. -

Ontario Delays March Break To Reduce Community Transmission of COVID19
By: Laura Steiner
Ontario is delaying its annual March Break until the week of April 12-16, 2021. The decision was announced by Education Minister Stephen Lecce at a press conference Thursday.
“This decision was made with the best advice of Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health and public health officials, including consultation with many local Medical Officers of Health,” Lecce said in a statement. The move comes as the province’s latest stay-at-home is lifted for the majority of Ontario communities as of Tuesday February 16, 2021 and businesses begin to reopen.
The postponement is part of an effort to reduce community spread. “The actions announced today serve to limit opportunities for congregation- while reaffirming the evidence that schools are safe for students,” Lecce said. The Ministry has also increased funding for Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), and asymptomatic testing.
The province is still asking residents to stay home as much as possible, and continue following the public health guidelines. Halton Region recorded an increase of 37 cases of COVID19 Thursday. Of these, five are from Milton. -
Hamilton Schools reopen Tuesday with Enhanced Measures
By: Kate McCullough, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Hamilton Spectator
After weeks of remote learning, Hamilton schools reopened to students on Monday with enhanced measures and the promise of asymptomatic testing.
With relatively high case counts in the city, some parents are wondering whether or not schools are safe.
Some experts say the benefits of in-school learning — social and academic — outweigh the risks.
“Nobody’s ever saying there will be zero risk, but even higher risk in the context of schools is low risk,” said Dr. Martha Fulford, infectious disease specialist at McMaster Children’s Hospital.
“Kids and their mental health and their physical health and their future is a critical thing that we need to be supporting.”
Hamilton public health says there were 39 outbreak-related cases of COVID-19 among students and staff at public and Catholic schools in the first half of the school year.
“We’ve seen evidence with all four types of transmission — student to student, student to staff, staff to student, staff to staff,” spokesperson James Berry said in an email to The Spectator.
The public health unit could not provide a breakdown of how transmission among students and staff was occurring.
The Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board, which has a student population of approximately 50,000, reported 218 cases of COVID-19 — 175 students, 42 staff and one “individual not identified” — between September and December.
Hamilton public health says 22 of those — 13 students and 9 staff — were related to an outbreak, which is defined by the province “as two or more lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases … with an epidemiological link, within a 14-day period, where at least one case could have reasonably acquired their infection in the school.”
The public board had a total of 10 outbreaks before the winter break.
As of Feb. 10, there have been 154 cases — 124 students and 30 staff — at the Hamilton-Wentworth Catholic District School Board since the beginning of the school year. According to Hamilton public health, seven outbreaks were declared between September and December, with 17 related staff and student cases.
Fulford said that while there may be higher risk in schools in places with high case counts like Hamilton, “the baseline risk is low.”
“The overwhelming data from Ontario, from the rest of Canada to the world, is that schools have been shown to be safe and not amplifiers of the pandemic, but more reflectors of what’s going on in the community,” she said.
In data compiled by the Toronto Star on new cases per 100,000 people in the last 14 days for each public health unit in the province, Hamilton was assigned a “higher” risk category for transmission in schools, based on U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) thresholds.
Fulford said “the challenge is the nuance behind these numbers.”
“Population numbers give you sort of give you some general trends,” she said, adding high case counts in the community “might” make schools riskier.
“Children need to be considered as a population in and of themselves.”
Medical experts have said kids are less likely to catch and spread the virus.
Fulford said the “problem” with the narrative that schools are high risk is that some people are “really only looking at COVID as if there’s nothing else to consider.”
“But it’s easier to talk about that, it’s easier to talk about COVID numbers because they’re easy to count,” she said, adding that the harms of remote learning and the benefits of in-person learning are much harder to quantify.
In Halton, 1,015 cases of the virus — 881 students and 134 staff — and 15 outbreaks were reported in school settings since the beginning of the school year. Forty-eight cases were related to outbreaks.
At the Grand Erie District School Board, which encompasses Brantford, as well as Brant, Norfolk and Haldimand counties, 78 cases — 56 students and 22 staff — have been reported since September among its more than 25,000 students and about 2,500 staff.
While many families are happy about the return to school, some have chosen not to send their kids back, citing fears around virus transmission.
Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious disease physician and associate professor at McMaster University, said studies from around the world looking at transmission from schools to the community have “derived different data.”
“Some of them (are) really suggesting no real transmission if good infection control practices in schools, whereas others have really said, OK, there is some transmission in schools that might get out into the community,” he said. “It’s a function of our ability to contact trace cases and really determine what’s happening outside of schools.”
Low case numbers in schools and a lack of local data make it challenging to draw definitive conclusions.
Hamilton’s COVID trends, he said, are “going in the right direction.” As of Feb. 9, there have been 9,630 cases of COVID-19 in Hamilton — 91 per cent of them resolved. Fourteen per cent of cases — approximately 1,350 — are among children and youth ages 0 to 19.
“There’s been a gradual decline in cases week to week,” Chagla said. “Every day is looking better and better and better.”
He said the decline has been in “basically all the parameters,” including per cent positivity, total cases and number of outbreaks, and that Hamilton is at a similar level as it was in late November or early December.
Since then, new variants of the virus, which are more transmissible, have been found in Ontario, and are not accounted for in existing modelling.
“Schools are probably the canary in the coal mine,” he said. “There can be localized transmission within the school, but it’s not necessarily that they’re fuelling transmission in the community.”
Asymptomatic testing, which the province announced would be expanded to schools across the province, could help detect the virus in children, preventing further transmission. But they can produce false negatives and false positives, Dr. Elizabeth Richardson, Hamilton’s medical officer of health, said at a media briefing on Tuesday.
It is unclear how asymptomatic testing will be implemented in Hamilton.
Dr. Jeff Pernica, head of the division of infectious disease in the department of pediatrics at McMaster University, said the challenge with COVID is that “people like numbers.”
“I would welcome getting more data, you know, having testing of schoolchildren so that we can actually prove that schools in Ontario are as safe as we think that they are,” he said. “But we need to do it in a co-rdinated way that doesn’t involve testing every kid every day because that is impossible.” -
6 steps to make mealtime less exhausting
Making a healthy dinner every night can be tiring and tedious, and living with arthritis and other illnesses can make it much worse.
Here are six tips from the Arthritis Society to make mealtime easier.
1. Preparation
Before you begin cooking, organize your workspace and make sure you have all the items and ingredients you will need close by.
2. One pot or pan
Making your meal in one pot or pan will reduce the number of dishes you have to wash. Those that can be placed in the dishwasher (if you have one) are an added bonus.
3. Pre-cut fruit and vegetables
Today, there are plenty of options when it comes to fresh and frozen pre-cut fruits and vegetables. Removing the steps of washing, peeling and chopping can help you save time and energy.
4. Helpful kitchen gadgets
There are many kitchen gadgets on the market that are specifically designed for people living with arthritis.
5. Batch cooking
Make many servings at a time, then store them in individual containers to help you save energy and eat healthy. By preparing meals only once, you’ll prevent any unnecessary overexertion.
6. Try a new recipe
Make meal preparation something to look forward to by using it as an opportunity to try a new recipe or experience a new food.
Learn how to live well with arthritis and find healthy recipes at arthritis.ca. -
PM Trudeau pledges $14.9B for public transit projects in Canada
By: Levon Sevunts
he federal government plans to spend $14.9 billion over the next eight years for public transit projects across Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Wednesday.
The announcement includes a permanent transit fund of $3 billion per year starting in 2026, Trudeau said, adding that it will provide municipal governments with stable and predictable funding for public transit projects.
Trudeau said the funding could be used for subway extensions, electrifying transit fleets, and for walkways and cycling pathways, as well as rural mobility needs.
“We need efficient and modern public transit systems that make our communities more connected,” Trudeau said at a virtual announcement.
The funding will also help support jobs in the Canadian manufacturing sector, Trudeau said.
“Canadian workers ‒ whether in Thunder Bay, Kingston, or Saint-Jérôme ‒ produce some of the world’s best buses, subways, and light rail trains,” Trudeau said.
“While these investments are good for the economy and crucial to our recovery from this global crisis, they’re also helping us achieve our climate goals.”
The development of public transit will help Canada exceed its 2030 target for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and will put the country on a path to net-zero emissions by 2050, Trudeau added.‘A landmark investment’
The Federation of Canadian Municipalities welcomed Wednesday’s announcement “as a landmark investment in the strong, nationwide recovery Canadians need.”
“This announcement builds on what’s working. The transit stream of the Investing in Canada Infrastructure Plan (ICIP) has been empowering cities to move forward with vital system expansions,” Garth Frizzell, president of the FCM, and Don Iveson, chair of FCM’s Big City Mayors’ Caucus, said in a joint statement.
The permanent transit fund offers cities the long-term predictability they need to continue “delivering transformational system growth,” they added.
“This has the potential to make transit modernization a centrepiece of the job-creating, emissions-reducing, quality-of-life-enhancing recovery that Canadians deserve on the other side of COVID-19,” they said.
The FCM also welcomed the federal government’s commitment to funding transit in rural communities.
“Getting people moving is a priority in communities of all sizes across Canada,” the statement said. “So we’re happy to see a nation-building transit plan with distinct support for rural and regional transportation needs.”