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DID YOU KNOW First World War hero, Saskatchewan Roughriders legend Piffles Taylor was born in Collingwood area?

Neil (Piffles) Taylor led an extraordinary life.

He was a prisoner during the First World War, played quarterback with a glass eye and had the former home of the Saskatchewan Roughriders named in his honour.

And while he spent most of his life in Western Canada, his roots can be traced back to south Georgian Bay.

Taylor was born on a Singhampton farm in 1895 to Samuel and Mary Taylor. He lived on the farm for several years before his family moved to Yellow Grass, Sask., and eventually Regina.

According to his grandson Jack Milliken, after studying in the Canadian officer training course at the University of Toronto in 1915, Taylor joined the forces in early 1916 and arrived in London later that year. 

He joined the Royal Flying Corps and was sent to France in August 1917.

On Sept. 19, 1917, Taylor was shot down and captured, as he described in a letter to his brother Sam dated three days later. 

“I can write only a short note as I have been wounded in the right shoulder and the right cheek,” he wrote. “Mumford, my observer, got bullets in the leg and in the arm and could not fight. I did my best till the last and had to land when my eyes filled with blood, which I did without crashing. Write my C.O. (commanding officer) and tell him I was sorry to let him down.”

He sustained many injuries, including the loss of his eye.

In his letters, he spoke of how he was treated well by the enemy, but a letter to his mother in December 1918 told a different story.

“I suppose you would like to know how the Germans have treated the prisoners of war,” he wrote. “I have always tried to make my letters cheerful in order to prevent you from worrying, and for my own part, I have no wish to complain now, but when you receive these letters, speaking of the kindness of the enemy etc., it makes one fairly boil. Now that the war is over, the question naturally arises: has it been worthwhile? The sorrows, the sacrifices and the suffering? I know that no one seriously doubts it, but if anyone does, they should ask any prisoner of war.”

After returning to Saskatchewan, Taylor got involved in rugby and what became the Canadian Football League (CFL). He played quarterback with a glass eye and, after his playing days, he coached the Regina Boat Club Seniors in 1922.

In 1926, he started on the executive of the Regina Roughriders, and eventually became president.

The Roughriders’ former home was named Taylor Field in his honour and, up until 2004, the winner of the CFL’s West Division received the Piffles Taylor Trophy. In 2006, the street in front of Taylor Field was named Piffle Taylor Way. He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1963.

He died in 1947.

How did he get the nickname Piffles?

“My cousin Sam was the authority on where the name came from, and I believe he said it meant somebody who was full of it, back in the day, and he picked it up at university and it stuck to him,” said Milliken, who lives in Wasaga Beach.

Four topics discussed by Collingwood’s police services board

Collingwood’s police services board met on Dec. 7. Here’s what was discussed:

Project lifesaver

A program to use tracking technology to quickly locate those with developmental disabilities or dementia who go missing will be implemented in 2021.

Project Lifesaver outfits vulnerable residents with a wearable tracking device that emits a unique FM signal. If the person goes missing, police can use a satellite receiver to locate them, cutting search times from hours to minutes.

The board had earlier this year approved $5,000 for Project Lifesaver Simcoe.

Acting detachment commander Chris Maecker said officers are being trained to use the tracking technology, and it should be in operation in September.

2020 accomplishments

Along with funding Project Lifesaver, the board highlighted several other accomplishments for the year, including:

• Endorsement of a security alarm registration program to be undertaken by the town;

• $750 scholarships for police auxiliary members to support educational upgrading or other training to help qualify them to become full-time police officers;

• $600 for a program to hand out bicycle bells to young cyclists.

The board also provided priorities for the local detachment as part of its three-year action plan.

Findlay Drive speeding

Collingwood OPP officers issued 18 speeding charges to drivers on Findlay Drive between July and December.

The street has been identified as an area for focused patrols, in light of complaints from residents about speeding and aggressive drivers. The street is also home to two schools.

Maecker said police will maintain a presence in the neighbourhood, as the issue “is not going away any time soon.”

More foot patrols

Officers may also have more of a presence in the downtown on foot. Maecker said there will be a focus on areas within the main street business district that have been identified as needing more police presence.

That includes bank vestibules and the bus shelter, which Maecker said are experiencing issues of loitering. Some of that is in connection with the local homelessness issue, and he said officers have also worked to connect people with the services they need.

What’s going on here? Electric charging stations added in Penetanguishene Town Hall parking lot

Those driving down Robert Street West in Penetanguishene might have noticed some colourful new parking spots adjacent town hall. The town has installed an electric vehicle charging station and marked off two-parking stalls in front of the charger.

JUST THE FACTS:

A new dual-port electric vehicle charging station has been installed in the Penetanguishene Town Hall parking lot at 10 Robert Street West.

The town has elected to charge users a per hour rate. The rate is currently set at $1.50 per hour.

The station is part of the ChargePoint global network of charging stations. ChargePoint offers a mobile app to help drivers find charging stations and easily pay for the electricity they use.

Installation of the charging station was made possible due to funding from the Government of Canada, the County of Simcoe and the Ontario Education Collaborative Marketplace.

Electric vehicles are an integral part of Canada’s plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 30 per cent by 2030.

The federal government’s goal is to have 100 per cent of new vehicles sales be zero-emission vehicles by 2040.

Bruce Arthur: Ontario’s auditor general stuck to the facts in criticizing COVID response. Doug Ford didn’t take it well

Wednesday, Doug Ford appeared to be under siege. He attacked Ontario’s auditor general, who had that morning on the province’s response to the pandemic, and traced how it has been cumbersome, reactive and political.

The premier was not happy. The premier blew his top. Ford has always loved savaging watchdogs, all the way back to Toronto city hall.

“I’m really glad the auditor general just got a health degree and became a doctor over the last year or so,” Ford later said, sarcastically, in response to a question about organizational structures and decision-making processes. He said, “this does nothing but undermine our entire health team.”

There wasn’t much, however, in terms of factual disagreements. The central tenet of the report is that the government has a muddled command structure, has not put public health at the forefront of its response, hides public health advice, and has alternately ignored its own experts or listened to the weaker ones. When the auditor general asked for correspondence detailing public health advice, by the way, the request was ignored.

The provincial government pointed out that the report lauds British Columbia even though Ontario has fewer active cases than B.C. in the second wave, though the government failed to mention it included comparative death rates — 19 per 100,000 by Aug. 31 in Ontario to 4 per 100,000 in B.C — in the first.

The province points out that of course the premier and cabinet are responsible for decision-making, rather than chief medical officer of health Dr. David Williams. But the report notes how weak Williams has been, and how the province often put public health in a backseat while it ignored its own experts and listened to its less qualified ones.

Meanwhile, auditor general Bonnie Lysyk patiently explained that key stakeholders in government signed off and responded to the report, which included interviews with many on medical front lines, in public health and in government.

“These reports have been vetted for factual accuracy, and I’ve letters signed by all the senior people within the province that attest to the accuracy of the information, have agreed to the recommendations, and have incorporated their responses,” said Lysyk, who has held the post since 2013, and is an independent officer of the legislature. “If that is changing now, then I guess some people signed letters and gave them to us and represented factual accuracy when that isn’t the case. And that would be a problem.

“My hope on this report is people look at it and focus on what needs to be done to go forward.”

This is where we could turn this into he-said she-said theatre, political scoreboard watching, horse-race stuff. Premier blasts auditor general report! Auditor general fires back! Who can possibly tell who is correct?

Let’s stick to the facts. We knew that under the decade-plus reign of the provincial Liberals, the lessons of SARS — which still haunts medical professionals who saw it up close, 17 years later — were in the name of year-to-year budgets, and a lack of imagination about what might happen. We knew labs withered, hospitals ran over capacity, emergency preparation was a luxury. As with , or , or , some of the failures of the pandemic long predated this government, and were just exposed by COVID-19. The pandemic, again, is a mirror.

Notably, the government did not take issue with those conclusions.

Then there is this government’s pandemic response, and the report mostly confirms that it has succeeded only relatively, and if so, despite itself. Like how the much-mentioned health command table — which like a lot of the response, was co-ordinated by outside consultants at considerable fees — was not a decision-making body, and was in fact , with over 80 people on what was a group phone call through July, and then a Zoom call after that. Or how there are loads of sub-tables that the province .

Or how Williams does not make his advice public, despite Minister of Health Christine Elliott claiming in the legislature on Wednesday, falsely, that he does. Or how Williams left masking mandates to local medical officers of health, and has both deferred decisions to MOH’s who to their own devices, .

We knew that advice on ceasing asymptomatic testing in the summer — which burned through valuable reagent and staff hours with almost no discernible benefit — was ignored, and that funding commitments on expanding lab capacity in time for September . The report estimates it meant missing approximately 119,000 COVID-19 infections.

We knew the thresholds for the province’s new framework were four times the level recommended by Public Health Ontario, though we still don’t have absolute confirmation on who moved the numbers. We know Williams and the cabinet and the premier , though, .

Ford can say Ontario is currently doing better than the rest of Canada’s bigger provinces, or the ghastly United States, and that’s true. But that doesn’t mean we’re doing well. It only means we’re not doing as badly as everyone else.

So yes, we know this government has somehow not driven this thing all the way onto the shoals yet. But when you look at how it’s built — how collective advice still leads to gut-based political decision-making with hidden public health advice from a weak and pliable CMOH, using a flawed framework, leaving local public health to fend for themselves when they don’t always share best practices, as noted in the report — you wonder how they won’t. Some in the medical community saw the premier’s siege-mentality reaction as an attempt at intimidation towards those who spoke to the auditor general.

Well, at least the province well in advance of the Christmas season, after being late and confused at earlier holidays. It smartly recommended that people should stick to their immediate household for the holidays, or for people who live alone, to one other household. That is important, necessary advice.

“Please don’t have big holiday parties, don’t have large gatherings,” said Ford. “Most importantly, follow the guidelines for your region as outlined in the province’s COVID-19 framework.”

Under the framework you can have 10 people indoors in a private gathering, or 50 indoors in restaurants or bars or casinos or meeting spaces, all the way to the red zone, one before lockdown. Look, Ontario is muddling through, is what we’re doing, and the province believes it’s doing very well as it plays with fire. We didn’t need a report to confirm that. But it did.

Bruce Arthur is a Toronto-based columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

‘WARNING’: Multiple meat products sold at Sobeys and FreshCo and other grocery stores now recalled over Listeria fears

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has expanded its recall of meat products sold at Sobeys. FreshCo and other grocery stores.

The Agency said the has now been updated to include additional products. As of Dec. 7, there are now eight products that have been identified during the CFIA food safety investigation.

Levitts Foods (Canada) Inc. is recalling certain Compliments brand, Levitts brand, and The Deli-Shop brand deli meat products from the marketplace due to possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

“Consumers should not consume the recalled products,” the CFIA said in its

There has been one reported illness that may be associated with the consumption of these products.

“If you think you became sick from consuming a recalled product, call your doctor,” the CFIA and Health Canada said. “Check to see if you have the recalled product in your home. Recalled products should be thrown out or returned to the store where they were purchased.”

Food contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes may not look or smell spoiled but can still make you sick, the Agency writes, adding that symptoms can include vomiting, nausea, persistent fever, muscle aches, severe headache and neck stiffness.

“Pregnant women, the elderly and people with weakened immune systems are particularly at risk. Although infected pregnant women may experience only mild, flu-like symptoms, the infection can lead to premature delivery, infection of the newborn or even stillbirth. In severe cases of illness, people may die,” the Agency writes.

The CFIA is verifying that the industry is removing the recalled product from the marketplace.

Here are some photos of the recalled products:

Editor’s Note: This story was updated at 8:45 p.m. om Tuesday, Dec. 8 to reflect that there has been an illness associated with this product.

‘Do we have to wait for someone to die?’ Clearview traffic study aims to tackle ‘significant’ speeding issues

Clearview Township has embarked on a traffic study in hopes of tackling a major issue across the municipality.

Speeding.

Petra Currie lives on 36/37 Side Road East off County Road 124. The speed limit on the first portion of the road is 50 km/h before it turns into an 80-km/h zone. 

She said the higher limit may have been appropriate decades ago, but, with more homes, she believes 50 km/h is appropriate.

“Even at 80, people are doing at least 100,” she said. “Sometimes I couldn’t tell you the colour of the car that just blew past.”

She said a group of neighbours petitioned the township to get the limit reduced.

“I have children and they are not safe to walk the dog or ride their bikes,” she said. “Do we have to wait for someone to die before it’s addressed?”

Henry Centen of Burnside and Associates made a presentation to council Nov. 9 outlining the scope of the study. It will look at 44 locations around Clearview, and will include data collected in June.

“(The) data that’s been collected would indicate you have a significant volume of speeders,” he said.

Heather McEachern lives on Sunnidale Concession 9, near Stayner, and said the road near her house turns into a “racetrack” on weekends.

“Definitely concerning for young children playing,” she said, adding a few of her chickens have been hit. “Quite a few times, I have witnessed dangerous driving racing past farm equipment.”

Mayor Doug Measures said council has heard the concerns from residents.

“I’m very hopeful we will have some changes to mitigate some of the excessive speeding around our community,” he said. 

The study plans to review and recommend posted speeds, and identify and recommend preferred traffic-calming methods.

Barrie to allow 56-unit townhouse development near GO train tracks

Barrie has given the go-ahead for a new development along a rail corridor.

Council approved a zoning bylaw amendment Nov. 23 that paves the way for the construction of a 56-unit condominium townhouse project on 2.1 acres of land near Little Avenue, adjacent to the GO Transit train line.

As part of the project, a road would be built to connect Little Avenue with Foster Drive.

The city will also permit a setback of 20 metres from the tracks, down from the typical 30.

This development, proposed by 428 Little Inc., includes six affordable housing units.

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In the past, residents expressed concern over potential density, increased traffic, townhouse heights, tree preservation and property value depreciation issues. They had suggested that infrastructure upgrades are also needed for Foster Drive and Maclaren Avenue.

The city says it will complete the “urbanization” of the area — sanitary sewer, water main and right-of-way upgrades — within the next decade.

Recently, Mayor Jeff Lehman said this is a “rare case” where a development is proposed in an established area of the city that has yet to be “fully urbanized.”

Donald Trump may be leaving, but the flames he fanned burn ever brighter

For almost as long as the real-world horror show of 2020 has been playing out in the United States, President Donald Trump has been promising that his country is “turning the corner.”

And finally, entering the last month of the year, the bend in the road is actually visible on the horizon: multiple COVID vaccines are on the way; a new president has won the election; both of those changes raise the hope for sustained economic recovery.

Many Americans have been breathing a deep sigh of relief at the prospect of a smoother and less dangerous road ahead. Canadians who have been anxious that the raging flames of their neighbour’s dumpster fire might cross the property line and burn their own house down may well be ready to relax.

But like a Toronto Maple Leafs fan celebrating a three-goal lead in a playoff elimination game, the justified optimism, upon quick reflection, gives way to the realization that the hardest part may still lie ahead. Everyone can see there is light at the end of the tunnel — bright light, yes — but the road to reach it appears bumpier and more dangerous than the horrifying path already travelled.

The analogies may seem trite given the real-life tragedy that’s unfolding. As Canadians know all too well in an era of soaring caseloads and renewed lockdowns, COVID isn’t done with us yet. And too many Americans are learning that in the hardest way. this week are four times higher than they were during the previous devastating peak of the summer. Over 100,000 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID, more than 20,000 in ICU units. Every state in the country is seeing increasing COVID deaths. On Thursday alone, 2,857 Americans died from it: a record high that is within 150 deaths of the number who perished on Sept. 11, 2001. In the weeks ahead, Americans might now expect a 9/11-scale loss of life every single day from the coronavirus.

President-elect Joe Biden has been working to communicate this horror and danger to the public: late last month he urged people (apparently with limited success) to stay isolated for the Thanksgiving holiday, on Thursday he proposed a voluntary mask mandate for the whole country for the first 100 days of his administration and confirmed he was keeping on Dr. Anthony Fauci in an elevated role.

But Biden is not president yet: the inauguration is not until Jan. 20. In the meantime, the man he’ll be replacing remains busy, apparently ignoring COVID, and working to sabotage Biden’s chances of success as president. Most famously by rejecting the election results and continuing to baselessly attack the integrity of the election, making the of his sizable number of supporters.

But that isn’t all of it: Trump has been who he sees as disloyal to him, to permanent administration staff jobs, , as many death-row inmates as possible, international and boxing in and to cement his own priorities, furiously , rolling back — just for starters.

A majority of Americans indicated in the election they were done with Trump, but he’s showing vividly that he isn’t done with them. In his final month and a half in office, he’s likely not just to continue loudly objecting to Biden’s victory, but doing as much as he can to make Biden’s presidency difficult.

Nowhere is this more evident than confronting the ongoing economic crisis that has accompanied the COVID pandemic’s devastation. Trump’s treasury secretary Steve Mnuchin recently placed more than $450 million in unspent COVID emergency lending dollars in an account that would make it inaccessible to Biden’s administration without further congressional authorization. It’s a move Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown said was an attempt to “” ahead of Biden’s inauguration.

That comes as the outgoing Congress has been deadlocked on further economic relief measures, and as existing relief packages are set to dry up. Some members of Congress (and Trump) have pointed to upticks in job numbers though the last half of the year and decent stock market index prices as signs the economy continues to recover. But jobs never recovered to anywhere close to their pre-pandemic heights, and the most recent report shows the recovery stalling. With COVID surging to record highs, the economy is set to suffer further: as economist Daniel Zhao Friday, “Ultimately, the virus is in the driver’s seat. The virus is what determines the trajectory of the recovery.” Meanwhile, roughly 12 million people are set to see their unemployment benefits expire on the day after Christmas.

By Thursday, crafted by a bipartisan group of rank-and-file members of Congress (one scaled back dramatically from earlier Democratic proposals) appeared to have enough support to pass before a Dec. 11 deadline.

Friday, Democratic House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi with vaccines on the way and Biden set to take over as president, said she was optimistic about “a new dynamic” that would “make all the difference in the world.” She said the compromise to keep the economy going — to put food on tables and pay bills for desperate people — appeared to her and to Biden as “at best, just a start.” But it was, she said, “a path forward” to get the country to a vaccine and a new president.

There is a light visible at the end of the tunnel. But finding a path to get to it without drastically more suffering and conflict may be as hard for Americans as anything that’s come before.

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

Doug Ford says COVID-19 trajectory trending ‘downwards’ as Ontario reports 834 new cases

Premier says new computer modelling on the trajectory of shows it heading “downwards” after hitting back-to-back record highs on the weekend, including 1,042 cases Sunday.

“I wouldn’t go as far as flattening but we see it going in the right direction,” he told his daily news conference, revealing that new data will be presented by health officials Thursday.

The reassurance from Ford — who is under pressure over the closures of indoor dining and gyms in Toronto, Peel, York and Ottawa — came as Ontario reported 834 new cases of COVID-19 Wednesday, a minimal increase of seven.

Testing was up 25 per cent as health officials continue looking for a drop in new infections suggesting the modified Stage 2 restrictions in the four hot zones are taking hold and reducing the spread of the virus.

But Ford was he said the curve was being flattened — just days before the Thanksgiving Friday surge to a then-record 939 cases that prompted an abrupt reversal to impose a 28-day clampdown.

“I’ve said that before and it scares me because it comes back and bites you in the butt real quick if we don’t follow it up,” the premier acknowledged.

Experts later said a backlog in testing at the time hid the true picture of the spread of COVID-19, despite numerous warnings from Toronto Public Health and the Ontario Hospitalizations the pandemic was taking a bad turn.

Labs across the province processed 30,010 tests Tuesday with no backlog, an increase of about 6,000 from Monday but well below highs of around 48,000 and prompting concerns there is not enough testing.

“We see the curve going down, which is great news,” Ford added Wednesday, cautioning “just because we see it sloping down a bit doesn’t mean we can let our guard down” while expressing hopes more businesses can reopen soon.

Shortly after Ford spoke at Queen’s Park, Peel medical officer Dr. Lawrence Loh said a Thanksgiving surge in cases revealed in spiking numbers last weekend pushed the region into the second wave.

He urged residents to limit their in-person contacts and called on places of worship to return to virtual gatherings only, even though in-person services are allowed under the law.

“Assume that anyone else outside your immediate household could be carrying the virus,” Loh said.

Meanwhile, the possibility that regions could join Toronto, Peel, York and Ottawa in modified Stage 2 with bans on indoor dining and closures of gyms and theatres appeared less likely.

“The numbers in both Halton and Durham have remained relatively low,” said Health Minister Christine Elliott.

Halton had 24 cases, up from 10, and Durham 26, down from 44 with Hamilton reported 18, an increase of four. There were 299 new cases in Toronto, 186 in Peel, 121 in York Region and 76 in Ottawa.

In total, the Greater Toronto-Hamilton Area accounted for 81 per cent of the new cases, and 12 of the province’s 34 public health units reported no new cases — a proportion that is higher than usual.

The province is operating on a baseline of positive tests that is higher every day than the first wave of the pandemic last spring, when cases topped out at 640 on April 24.

Cases have not been below that level in three weeks and a record 7,474 Ontarians are fighting active cases of the virus after testing positive in the last 14 days.

There were five new deaths reported Tuesday, including two in nursing homes, raising the total to 3,108 since the first fatality in March. More than 72,885 cases of the virus have been confirmed and 62,303 are considered resolved, although many people who have had COVID-19 feel lingering effects.

The Ministry of Long-Term Care said 87 of the province’s 626 nursing homes remained in outbreak mode, a drop of one with another 32 additional residents and three staff diagnosed with COVID-19 raising the number of active cases to 396 and 297 respectively.

To date, 1,996 nursing-home residents have died from the virus,

Amid concerns that hospitals could fill up over the winter because of COVID-19 and the flu, there were 312 Ontarians in hospital for the novel coronavirus with 71 requiring intensive care and 51 on ventilators to breathe.

That is a marked increase from the same day in September, when there were 128 people hospitalized, 29 in ICU and 17 ventilated.

As has been the case for a few days, there were no schools closed because of outbreaks, but schools reported 92 more cases in students and staff and there were 595 of the province’s more than 4,800 schools with infections, or about 12 per cent of the total.

Rob Ferguson is a Toronto-based reporter covering Ontario politics for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

Bruce Arthur: Crisis? Ontario’s COVID-19 response is just adequate enough to say that others are worse

“In fact, Ontario is not in a crisis right now. You want to speak about who is in crisis? Have you taken a look at Alberta, where they’re doubling up patients in intensive care units? We’re not doing that in Ontario.” — Christine Elliott, Ontario minister of health, this week.

You see, Ontario is not in a crisis, because Ontario is not jamming two people to a room in the ICU. Nor is Ontario rationing oxygen, unlike some provinces we could name. Yes, Alberta is currently being run by Jason Kenney’s pure, uncut conservatism: you have the personal freedom to infect yourself and others, and perhaps to get sick and die. Ontario has those instincts — the recent framework was the best example, — but for various reasons, this province plays closer to the middle. So Ontario, unlike Alberta is not in crisis.

By extension, York Region must not be in crisis. Friday to put York into lockdown, despite the fact that and test positivity than Toronto did when it was put into lockdown two weeks ago. York begged to avoid the province’s grey zone then, and again now: its local medical officer of health, Dr. Karim Kurji, signed the letter.

York still has hospital capacity, you see. Public health is not overwhelmed yet. Therefore, York is not in crisis. Maybe it gets locked down Monday, maybe not. Soon places like Waterloo, Hamilton, Windsor and Durham may not be in crisis, in a similar way.

What about schools? Schools are not in crisis. The minister of education, Stephen Lecce, keeps telling us that 99.9 per cent of children in school are COVID-free. Of course, then came asymptomatic testing at Thorncliffe Public School in East York, driven by Michael Garron Hospital and supported by the province. It found , which the province and even Toronto Public Health downplayed given the prevalence of in the neighbourhood.

Then three teachers said they were walking off the job, and now the school is closed. The City of Toronto for schools and daycares: runny noses will require a COVID test again to return to school; the siblings of sick kids will have to be kept home, too.

Those conditions had been changed at the beginning of October, when the province started trying to curb testing everywhere it could because the backlog was crippling the system, and schools were part of that. The province had back in the spring in time for September, as part of Ontario’s puzzling failure until the fall was already underway.

More schools will be tested, now: In East York, Scarborough, North York, York Region. We are about to find out whether we have been missing cases in schools for two months, and what that means. Maybe it means closing schools.

But for now, schools are not in crisis.

The premier was not available to weigh in Friday because the province has also struck a vaccine distribution task force, which includes nobody from public health, or geriatric medicine — is long-term care, where 124 people have died in the last two weeks and 310 since Halloween, in crisis? — or family medicine, or nursing, but does include former Toronto police chief Mark Saunders, for some reason. Still, a task force is important.

“I’m going to work my hardest to ensure we have a data-driven and equitable approach to vaccination,” says Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Toronto, who is on the task force. “We need to hear voices from disproportionately impacted communities, including Indigenous, South Asian, Black and impoverished communities. Ultimately, for any vaccine program to be a success we need meaningful community engagement, and stellar communication that is transparent and honest.”

All that, at an Ontario-wide level, would be a commendable first. Meanwhile, as reported by the Star’s Jennifer Yang and Kate Allen, Ontario’s poorest, most vulnerable, most racialized people are , just as they .

And still, the province declines to extend paid sick leave or reintroduce an eviction ban. Ontario’s eviction ban , as the second wave was already underway. Is that a crisis?

And then there are the hospitals. This is a hyperlocalized disease, but the system is straining as patients are shuttled like it’s a shell game, and staff are verging on burnout and shortages.

“(The hospital system is) transferring ICU patients every day for a bed, but now we’re also transferring ward patients, and this is new,” says Dr. Michael Warner, the head of critical care at Michael Garron Hospital. “I think public health and political decisions to some degree have been made based on the presumption that the health-care system would be there at the end of the day as the ultimate safety net. And that we could accept some mistakes or some reactive responses because the health-care system would be there, as it has been.

“But as we’ve been told all along, hospitalizations are lagging indicators, and those lagging indicators are trying to scream that things are not OK. And unless we provide support for people, paid sick days, surveillance testing in schools, which should be mandatory in high-risk areas, and (isolation), a vaccine will not be here in time to bridge that gap.”

Ontario was at 153 people in the ICU a week ago, and it was 207 Thursday. Surgeries are being cancelled, here and there. The modelling table pegged 400 in the ICU as the number at which point hospital services start to stop functioning. We’re not there yet, thankfully.

So maybe Ontario is not in crisis, if you define crisis as beds jammed together in the ICU, hallway ventilation, not enough oxygen to go around. It’s a hell of a way to define a crisis, but that’s apparently where we’re at.

Bruce Arthur is a Toronto-based columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: