Category: ptlsugd

Wasaga releases RFP for beachfront development

Wasaga Beach has formally asked for requests for proposals to redevelop the main beachfront.

Town officials will send the RFP documents to an already-approved list of six companies on Nov. 13.

The bids for the municipally owned parts of the commercial strip will be evaluated based on each company’s development experience, financial ability to take on the project, how it fits with council’s vision, proposed improvements to the public realm, parking and the price to purchase the land.

Five development blocks will be up for grabs. An area designated as Festival Square will not be part of the RFP; in an email to Simcoe.com, CAO George Vadeboncoeur said the intent behind keeping that area — approximately at the top end of the Main Street pedestrian mall — is so it can be developed in the future as a public square.

Along with a review by an evaluation team made up of Mayor Nina Bifolchi, Vadeboncoeur, director of public works Kevin Lalonde, and director of planning and economic initiatives Doug Herron, the proponents will be required to make a presentation to council.

Those presentations will be held behind closed doors.

While he was pleased that councillors will now be part of the presentations by potential developers, Coun. Joe Belanger did express concern about councillors being limited to asking just one question.

“That is not the kind of input I would expect from council members on the most significant project we’ve ever undertaken,” he said. “If there are questions, concerns, clarifications, we’re entitled to that.”

He was also disappointed that councillors had limited time and access to review the RFP documents prior to their approval on Nov. 12.

Vadeboncoeur said the idea behind limiting the number of questions was to keep meetings to a reasonable length of time. He did acknowledge a councillor could ask a supplementary question.

“It was all in the context of providing an hour, hour-and-15-minute opportunity to make a presentation and ask questions,” he said.

The deadline to respond back to the town is Feb. 26. Vadeboncouer presented a timeline that would see the preferred proponents selected by the end of April, followed by a negotiation process with the preferred proponents and a final approval of a developer, or developers, by mid-July.

Along with the town’s consultants, Deloitte, the municipality will also hire a “fairness monitor” who will oversee the evaluation process to ensure it is fair.

“Today marks a significant milestone for our community as we officially move into the next phase of the beachfront redevelopment process,” Bifolchi said. “Council is excited to see what plans developers have to revitalize this important part of our community.”

Media organizations still waiting for rollout of key federal government support program

As the second of wave of COVID-19 , questions remain as to when a key federal government support for journalism will be rolled out.

The refundable journalism labour tax credit for media outlets was part of an aid package first unveiled by the Liberals in 2018, as the media landscape was getting smaller, newspaper editions were being cut and financially struggling outlets were shutting down for good.

The credit is calculated at a rate of 25 per cent of a newsroom employee’s salary, for a maximum credit of $13,750 per employee per tax year. Outlets eligible for the credit must first be designated a “qualified Canadian journalism organization” (QCJO) by an independent panel. The credit is retroactive to Jan. 1, 2019.

Despite being announced almost two years ago, it would appear the program has yet to start issuing payments for the credit for 2019.

Canadian Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault had said in May that the first eligible news organizations would learn if they qualify for the credit this past spring, and that payments would follow in the summer.

However, media advocacy organizations say they’re unaware of any outlet having yet received a payment. The groups also say it’s unclear just how many outlets have received the QCJO designation.

Criteria that an outlet must meet for the designation includes being a corporation, partnership or trust operating in Canada, engaged in the production of original news content and which employs at least two journalists.

Guilbeault’s office referred questions about the tax credit this week to the Canada Revenue Agency, which told the Star in a statement that QCJO designations are now being issued, but that provisions in the Income Tax Act prevent the agency from disclosing who has applied for, received, or been denied a designation.

The agency did not respond to questions as to when the panel actually started approving QCJO designations, or when payments would be issued.

“While we’re seeing things being cut to the bone — and there’s very much a sword of Damocles hanging over the industry right now — we’re trying to figure out what the best course of action is, because we don’t have a lot of details at this point, from the government, and from others,” said Brent Jolly, president of the Canadian Association of Journalists.

“Sometimes I worry that it’s paralysis by analysis…That at the end of the day, it’s ultimately journalists and the public’s right to know that are the ones most compromised by the lack of action.”

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the problems of an industry, particularly newspapers, that has struggled for years with declining advertising revenues, while at the same time media outlets are being relied on more than ever by the public.

Since the first wave of the pandemic hit in March, 24 community newspapers have ceased publication, while about two dozen more are temporarily closed, said April Lindgren, a journalism professor at Ryerson University. Two private radio stations have stopped operating and 11 daily newspapers have cut one or more of their print editions, she said.

Lindgren is the principal investigator with the Local News Research Project, which collects data for the COVID-19 Media Impact Map for Canada, along with online trade publication J-Source and the Canadian Association of Journalists.

“Yet again we’re seeing local media in particular being in trouble at a time when never before has their role in informing the public about what are essentially life-and-death situations been so important,” she said.

“That’s why it’s so disturbing because you won’t find out about what’s happening in the intensive care unit of your local hospital by watching a national news report. You need local media to make those calls and ask those questions.

“To give people that information so they can make informed decisions about whether they want to send their kids to in-person classes or study online, or whether their elderly relatives are going to be OK in local nursing homes.”

At least for this year, media organizations, along with many other businesses across the country, have been able to tap into the federal government’s emergency wage subsidy, brought in due to COVID-19 to help cover a portion of workers’ wages.

(Torstar, the parent company of the Toronto Star, is among the recipients of the subsidy.)

“It’s been the lifeline for many newspapers across the country this year,” said Bob Cox, chair of the Canadian News Media Association.

Guilbeault’s office highlighted in a statement to the Star on Friday that the government had also brought in a one-time $45-million special measures program due to COVID-19 to help digital, small circulation and free magazines and community newspapers.

While grateful for the wage subsidy and other one-time supports, Cox said media organizations would like clear timelines from the government regarding the journalism labour tax credit.

“Here is our biggest fear: It’s that next year we are going to go forward and we’re not going to have wage subsidies, and we’re not going to have special measures, and the kind of support we got this year for COVID,” he said. “And we need (the tax credit) working by then so that we can go back to something approaching normal.”

Guilbeault is also continuing to monitor work in Australia and France around possible measures to make digital giants like Facebook and Google pay media outlets for using their content, his office said Friday. The minister discussed the issue with his French and Australian counterparts this week, and is considering options for a made-in-Canada framework.

Jacques Gallant is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

‘Absolutely wonderful’: First year of New Tecumseth ATV bylaw proves to be smooth ride

There have been few bumps in the road when it comes to the bylaw passed one year ago allowing ATV riders to use local roads to access trails or do shopping in town.

New Tecumseth recently conducted a review of the bylaw it passed in November 2019.

In his one-year report, municipal law enforcement supervisor Chris Glanville said no charges were laid throughout the year by either police or the town — but that’s not to say things were perfect.

The OPP did receive 32 complaints and issue 13 warnings. Three accidents were also reported, but none resulted in a death.

The town’s bylaw department, meanwhile, fielded three complaints, but didn’t issue any warnings.

The cost for police to investigate the complaints was a little more than $3,300, while the town spent about $478. But the town did spend an additional $3,775 to place new signs around town.

There were also no issues to report from the Ontario ATV Clubs.

At the Nov. 2 committee-of-the-whole meeting, Glanville said he also spoke to the OPP detachment and was told the past year was “pretty much status quo” compared to others.

Glanville will be bringing additional information to the Nov. 30 council meeting, comparing this past year with other recent years. He will also report back on complaints as it relates to dirt bikes being used illegally on roads, which is an issue about which some members of council receive regular complaints.

ATV user and Tottenham resident Patrick Pyke created a petition in 2018 that helped convince council to pass the bylaw.

He said he is pleased with how the first year has gone.

“It’s been absolutely wonderful,” he said. “I can go into town and not have to take my truck if I need to go to the store or Timmies. It’s a lot easier to get to the trails, too.”

ATV users are permitted to use all municipal roads except for Industrial Parkway — the busy bypass used by dump trucks and transport vehicles — between Highway 89 and Young Street.

ATVs are also not allowed to use county roads, like Tottenham Road, or provincial highways like Highway 89.

Pyke encourages other municipalities that haven’t put rules in place to look at these results.

“Give it a shot,” he said. “It will bring a lot more tourism in to the area. It’s a big plus all around for the town and for us as ATVers.”

Prior to New Tecumseth passing the bylaw, Adjala-Tosorontio was the only local municipality with a bylaw allowing ATVs on municipal roads.

Essa Township has been studying the issue, and council is expected to consider putting a trial bylaw in place in the spring.

Other municipalities in Simcoe County that allow ATVs on roads or select roads include Innisfil, Wasaga Beach, Clearview, Springwater, Severn and Tiny. The specific rules vary in each municipality.


STORY BEHIND THE STORY: Simcoe.com wanted to revisit the ATV bylaw that council passed one year ago to see how things went for the municipality and local riders.

Why Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine results represent more good news for Canada

A second company touting the results of its potential COVID-19 vaccine Monday represents particularly good news for Canada.

Citing early results, Massachusetts-based Moderna said its vaccine candidate could be as much as 94.5 per cent effective. The announcement follows results reported by that hinted at as much as 90 per cent immunity for that company’s vaccine candidate.

Canada already has a contract in place for 56 million doses of the Moderna vaccine and 20 million doses of Pfizer’s candidate, should they complete testing and receive Health Canada approval.

The new Moderna results are an early look at the final stage of human testing, but the trial isn’t done yet, so things could change. While results have been examined by an independent data safety monitoring board, they have yet to be published or peer reviewed.

At this point, the company says its results show no major safety concerns. Some volunteers reported mild or moderate symptoms, such as fatigue or headache.

“This is a pivotal moment in the development of our COVID-19 vaccine candidate. Since early January, we have chased this virus with the intent to protect as many people around the world as possible,” Stéphane Bancel, chief executive officer of Moderna, said in a statement.

Both Pfizer and Moderna are using a new technology that relies on mRNA to make their vaccines. Their doses include a tiny recipe for spike protein DNA, and, in theory, will prompt the recipient’s immune system to fight off future coronavirus infections. Because of the similarity in approaches, many experts were anticipating the two vaccines would see similar efficacy rates.

While RNA is a technology that has been considered promising for awhile, it has had one major drawback: the fact that doses have had to be stored at a temperature as cold as -80 C, which means an eventual distributor would need access to refrigerators and trucks .

But Moderna said Monday that its candidate remains stable at 2 to 8 C, which is about the same as a normal refrigerator, for 30 days.

“We believe that our investments in mRNA delivery technology and manufacturing process development will allow us to store and ship our COVID-19 vaccine candidate at temperatures commonly found in readily available pharmaceutical freezers and refrigerators,” chief technical operations and quality officer Juan Andres said in a release.

Pfizer’s and Moderna’s are two of the seven candidate vaccines for which the federal government has locked down advance purchase agreements. Most of the candidates are being developed by companies in the U.S. and Europe, but one Canadian company, , is expanding its trials on Canadian volunteers this week.

Canada’s vaccine-procurement strategy can be best described as putting . If all seven candidates were to be approved, Canada would be entitled to a minimum of 358 million doses of vaccine.

Most of the vaccine candidates will require two doses per person, but that is still almost enough to vaccinate everyone in the country five times.

That said, getting a working vaccine is only the first step. Once a vaccine has its final testing results, Health Canada must decide whether to approve it.

Then, millions of doses have to be manufactured — a process that is already scaling up — and the government will have to figure out how to distribute it across the country. The federal government is currently trying to find a to take on that task. Actual vaccination programs will be run by the provinces and territories.

After Pfizer announced promising results last week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he expects the first vaccine doses to land as early as the beginning of next year.

Correction — Nov. 16, 2020 — This article has been updated to reflect new statements from Moderna on the storage requirements of its vaccine. As well, Canada would be entitled to a minimum of 358 million doses, not 358 doses, of vaccine if all seven vaccine candidates were to be approved.

How can Toronto enter the next decade a safer city? To fight crime, we must first fight poverty

The first year of the new decade has not been a promising one for gunplay in Toronto.

At some 409 incidents as of last Wednesday, the city had already surpassed last year’s shooting total by 39 — despite being in lockdown for months due to .

So as we look ahead to , how can we ensure this fresh, 10-year span won’t be remembered as the Decade of the Gun?

Maybe look to Einstein for help.

“He said, ‘the consciousness that created the problem cannot be expected to solve it,’ ” says crime expert and York University sociologist Livy Visano, paraphrasing the theoretical physicist. “That means the problem can’t be solved by the existing solutions.”

Those existing solutions are rooted in social and economic systems where wealth and power are cemented in unequal proportions — and indeed where the perceptions of crime itself are cast unfairly on the downtrodden, he says.

New solutions to tamp down crime in the city, many experts say, should focus on alleviating poverty — through new housing plans, equitable wealth distribution, better policing practices and even by striking some common, poverty-boosting crimes from the books.

But the link between impoverishment and crime is more complex than many imagine, Visano says.

“With crime and socioeconomic status there’s been a long historical relationship since the inception of criminology (in the 18th century),” he says.

“But the question that the more progressive criminologists would (ask) is, how strong is that correlation?”

Certainly, Visano says, gun and gang crimes are largely products of poverty — where the acquisition of goods, respect, education and power is limited by economic status.

“But we have a tendency to look at this (poverty-crime) relationship and not question what crime is,” he says.

Visano says there are three broad categories of crime — crimes of pathology (or mental illness) crimes of passion and those of profit.

And people of every economic class participate in all three types with equal proclivity.

“Crimes of pathology (such as) serial killers straddle all classes, crimes of passion staddle all classes,” Visano says.

“But crimes of profit — this also involves all classes — but the manifestations seem to be quite different.”

On white-collar Bay Street, crimes of profit would likely involve embezzlement or insider trading, he says. Keystroke crimes.

“But for the more disadvantaged communities we see more visible forms, more obvious forms … in the more public and visible space,” Visano says.

And that visibility — the guns, the gangs, the violence of the street — creates a general perception that crime is largely a province of the poor.

That doesn’t mean that street crime is not a serious problem, Visano says. (With a little more than two months left in the year, some 200 people have already been killed or injured by gunfire in Toronto.)

There’s also an obvious solution — a redistribution of wealth that creates more equal opportunities for social status and material comfort across society.

But such a redistribution is almost surely a pipe dream, Visano says.

“It’s not just the redistribution of wealth because that is just not in the mindsets (of people in power) given that we live in a capitalist society,” he says. “Are we prepared to eradicate poverty? Absolutely not. That will never happen.”

Instead, Visano says, crime solutions lie in a number of other areas.

Ryerson University criminologist Emily van der Meulen says one of these is to decriminalize common offences like prostitution and simple drug possession — crimes which themselves exacerbate poverty.

“Canada has a long history of criminalizing poverty,” van der Meulen said in an online interview.

“This is demonstrated particularly clearly by the ways in which police services target low-income and racialized people when enforcing certain laws, for example laws related to sex work and drug use,” she says.

Striking down current prostitution and drug laws, van der Meulen says, would also lower poverty rates significantly.

“To alleviate poverty, we need to consider how policing, laws, sentencing and the criminal justice system as a whole target and discriminate against low income people, in turn keeping them in precarious situations,” she says.

“To begin to address poverty, these activities need to be removed from the Criminal Code.”

A criminal record can be a barrier to accessing housing and employment, both vital to financial success, van der Muelen says. She says past records for such offences should be expunged.

At the city level, police could be encouraged to look the other way, even if the offences remained on the books, van der Muelen says.

“The police can adopt a policy of nonenforcement. This approach has been effective in other jurisdictions,” she says.

“Deciding to not enforce specific Criminal Code provisions can help rectify the highly problematic and disproportionate impacts that unjust laws — like those related to sex work and simple drug possession — have on marginalized and low income communities.”

Also locally, the provision of affordable and attractive housing for low-income and marginalized people would go a long way toward alleviating poverty and crime, says Anne Babcock, president and CEO of Toronto’s WoodGreen Community Services.

“Many populations are disproportionately engaged with the justice system because of their background, their race, their age and their socio-economic (situations),” says Babcock, whose agency is one of the city’s largest affordable housing providers. “Reducing poverty by offering housing-first programs is one way to intervene in the life of vulnerable groups in a way that brings stability and creates the space to then build new skills, strengthen connections with the community and improve physical and mental well-being.”

Babcock points to one particular group — youth who have aged-out of foster care programs — as a prime example of the link between housing, poverty and crime.

She says almost 60 per cent of these tossed-about kids are homeless within six months of leaving the system, while some 75 per cent of them are victims of crime within a year.

An American study showed that 42 per cent of young men who’d transitioned out of foster care had been arrested, while 23 per cent had been convicted of crimes, says Babcock, whose agency’s Free2Be program helps provide housing support and a range of other programs to such kids.

“While we don’t necessarily focus on crime, we do know that this is a particular group that is more likely to be … involved in the criminal justice system,” Babcock says.

“We (also) know that this moment in their life is important. By securing housing, we are able to support the youth with programming opportunities that set them on a more successful path,” she says.

Babcock says almost 75 per cent of the youth going through the agency’s post-foster-care program secured stable housing, and 94 per cent were in school or working.

Visano contends, however, that the most important tools for reducing violence and street crime may rest within disadvantaged communities themselves, where the vast majority of people have knowledge of street and gang life, but shun it.

“A question that is seldom asked is, ‘We have a lot of violence, but why wouldn’t we have more, what does this say about the communities?’ ” Visano says. “The majority of people in those communities don’t resort to violence.”

Yet when searching for solutions, politicians and committee leaders most often huddle within their own power structures — comfort zones that avoid the participation of others, or seek it in token portions.

“They’re cemented to privilege in many ways that prevent them from going beyond the hierarchies of power,” Visano says.

He says the views of people in underprivileged communities are often unsought, or rejected when they are.

As well, Visano says, politicians often turn to a list of usual suspects when seeking community involvement — people with a public profile but limited knowledge of the communities they are meant to represent.

“There’s a tendency to cherry pick members of the community to participate on some of these committees or counsels,” he says. “We don’t have the whole spectrum of community input.”

Visano also promotes something progressive members in his field describe as peacekeeping criminology.

“It’s trying to build within the community (to) collaborate and corroborate within the community,” he says.

And for this, Visano says, police reform is also a key — in particular, reform that would have police respect the privacy of underprivileged Malvern residents as much as those of wealthy Rosedale.

“It matters very little to the police when they go into certain highrise structures in disadvantaged communities and patrol the hallways, the stairwells looking for suspects,” he says.

“The … logistics of policing certainly targets the disadvantaged communities on a routine, regular basis.”

This targeting creates tensions that only heighten crime levels and amplify them by the sheer volume of surveillance.

“Compare Forest Hill, The Kingsway, the Bridle Path with Rexdale, Malvern, Regent Park,” Visano says, referring to some of the city’s wealthier and more disadvantaged neighbourhoods in turn. “The types of policing in terms of the vehicles that are used by the police and the aggressive style of profiling, (they’re) very, very different.”

And this style of aggressive policing pushed especially hard in 2005 — the so-called Year of the Gun in Toronto — has little lasting benefit.

“They had this program where they would enforce and aggressively pick up a lot of the street gangs,” Visano says. “But there was no direct commitment to looking at their own values, their own processes, to examine where this violence comes from.”

That program — the Toronto Anti-Violence Intervention Strategy or TAVIS — did little to bring crime down long term, Visano says.

“It cleaned up the problem for a couple of months, but the underlying roots, the basis, the foundations of all this have never been talked about,” he says.

As well, Visano says, most of the information and data available to study gun and gang violence comes from the police — with all the institutional baggage and bias that entails.

“Why don’t we engage in the language of those who are involved?” he says.

“Why not do more self report studies, why not do more observational studies and understand what it is that compel these youth to get into these gangs and to don the mantle of violence?”

A watchful media, attuned to injustices in underprivileged communities, is also a key to crime reduction, as is the mass vigilance and peaceful resistance within the communities themselves, Visano says.

“We’re seeing it in the Black Lives Matter happening throughout North America that the media coverage and the participation of the community I think will stimulate solutions,” he says. “We’re not leaving it to politicians … we’re having the movement directed by spokespeople from the community and articulated by the media.”

But Yafet Tewelde, a Toronto community activist and PhD candidate at York, says the redistribution of wealth in this economic powerhouse of a city is essential in tamping down crime.

“When we talk about fighting crime, reducing crime, the response is traditionally of course police, prisons, courts,” says Tewelde, whose thesis centres on the relationship between multiculturalism and policing in Canada.

But Tewelde says reports dating back decades show that increases in these traditional, law-and-order responses only amplify crime, and that what’s really needed is the alleviation of poverty.

“The problem is that people think of these as two separated things; you fight poverty on one side and you fight crime on the other,” he says. “But poverty-fighting is crime-fighting. These things are intrinsically linked and you have to direct resources into that.”

As such, the job lies largely outside the city’s economic orbit and capacity, Tewelde says.

“We’re actually talking about a massive redistribution of wealth, it’s not a city issue,” he says.

He says that only the provincial and federal governments have the regulatory and financial powers to create large-scale poverty-fighting programs.

“When we talk about poverty reduction, it’s such a simple answer that requires a big cultural shift,” Tewelde says. “It’s a massive redistribution of wealth.”

Tewelde says the current COVID-19 crisis has created a new appreciation of lower-paid workers — who comprise a good percentage of the essential workforce that has kept the stricken city running.

And this could translate, he says, into a willingness to push wealth downwards across society.

“But the reality is there’s always been these opportunities … there’s been lots of crises,” he says.

“I’ve learned not to put too much stock into people’s response to a crisis.”

The city, however, isn’t bereft of crime reduction capabilities, Tewelde says.

For example, he says, it can initiate programs to bring down high school dropout rates and implement police reforms that add more social workers to its crime-control array.

“If we’re just focusing on policing for example, how do we redirect more resources into people who are first responders that aren’t people with guns?”

Joseph Hall is a Toronto-based contributor for the Star. A former Star reporter and feature writer, he is based in Toronto.

‘Are people to be left to die?’ Canada pumps millions into COVID-19 vaccine-sharing effort, but fears persist for poorer nations

This story is part of an ongoing series — The Road to a Vaccine — that looks at Canada’s quest to secure a amid the global pandemic, as well as the hurdles and history it faces to do so.

As the race for a vaccine kicks into high gear, has announced that Canada will chip in $440 million to a global effort to share vaccines and make sure poorer countries aren’t left behind.

Trudeau told reporters Friday said the money for the COVAX Facility will be divided between the global procurement effort — which could mean as many as 15 million additional doses for Canadians — and the sharing program by which vaccines will be sent to countries that wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford them.

“To eliminate the virus anywhere, we need to eliminate the virus everywhere,” Trudeau said. “That’s why Canada is helping ensure vaccines are distributed quickly and fairly around the world.”

There are now more than 100 teams around the world at work on potential vaccines, known as vaccine candidates, a handful of which are moving into the final stages of clinical testing. But it’s a competition some say is at risk of being overshadowed by the nation-versus-nation battle for doses, as a weakened global response has spurred richer countries to seek out vaccine deals of their own.

COVAX is the major global attempt to try to avoid having all the vaccines go to the highest bidders.

Launched this spring by, among others, the World Health Organization and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Gavi alliance, it’s since emerged as the only real international effort to get countries to work together on both procuring, manufacturing and distributing vaccines. While Canada had officially signed on as of Monday, details of the financial commitment were unclear until now.

For a country such as Canada, which can afford to buy in, the benefits of the program are arguably twofold: Canada gets the option to share in any successful vaccines the group obtains access to, but is also able to support the sending of vaccines to poorer countries.

For countries that can’t afford vaccines any other way, it could be a lifeline.

The fear that countries with shallower pockets are going to be left out when the time comes was back in the spotlight this week at the UN Virtual Summit.

“Are people to be left to die?” asked Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, a COVID-19 survivor, referring to the problems that may lie ahead.

If all goes to plan, COVAX is aiming to deliver two billion vaccine doses by the end of 2021 to countries around the world, distributing them based on population and need rather than ability to pay.

But that goal is highly dependent on the money they have yet to get from donor countries and philanthropists.

Half of Canada’s financial commitment, or $220 million, will go to COVAX’s financial arm, known as the COVAX Advance Market Commitment, which is in charge of funding vaccines for low and middle-income countries. But it has yet to meet its initial $2-billion goal, raising questions about who will be left out if the needed money isn’t raised.

The program was dealt some early blows, when major players such as the U.S., China and India all declined to sign on, choosing instead to focus on their own vaccine needs.

The United States, for example, has dubbed its own vaccine effort Operation Warp Speed and poured an estimated $10 billion into it while making clear that the fruits of its labour will be for Americans only.

Canada hasn’t escaped accusations of selfishness either.

A public letter signed by more than 100 health and policy experts and released last week accuses the federal government of undercutting efforts such as COVAX by participating in the global jockeying for vaccines.

In fact, before announcing the COVAX funding, Trudeau revealed Canada’s latest advance purchase agreement, this time with a company called AstraZeneca, which has been working with Oxford University on a potential vaccine. Should it pass clinical trials, Canada will be able to acquire as many as 20 million doses.

Canada now has agreements with six different biopharmaceutical companies, in addition to any doses obtained through COVAX. If every vaccine candidate ends up successful (which is admittedly unlikely) and Canada buys the maximum number of doses to which it’s entitled through these contracts, it could end up with almost 300 million vaccine doses.

What happens when COVAX bumps up against all those advance purchase agreements remains murky.

Early on in the pandemic, Canada got stung by a general lack of preparation when it came to acquiring personal protective equipment, notes Colin Furness, an infection-control epidemiologist and assistant professor at the University of Toronto.

Now, he says, the government is moving hard to make sure the same thing doesn’t happen with vaccines: “Aggressively negotiating and throwing around the fact that we’ve got a currency that has purchasing power and throwing out elbows (to) get in line, that’s an understandable thing to do,” he said.

“Though the consequences to those who are then behind us in line, I mean, ethically, that can get a little bit complicated.”

For Jason Nickerson, a humanitarian affairs adviser with Doctors Without Borders, the litmus test for whether it’s possible to have these purchase agreements without jettisoning global responsibilities will be whether or not health-care workers and people who are high risk are able to get vaccinated first and in a timely manner — no matter where they are in the world.

“I think the major concern is that vaccines are going to be delivered to high-income countries to use before they are delivered to low-income countries to vaccinate their high risk populations,” he said.

Karina Gould, Canada’s minister of international development, says that vaccine companies have already committed certain doses to COVAX, so it’s not a matter of Canada’s orders bumping them out of the queue. The exact delivery timelines are still under discussion.

“Canada’s position is that we expect vaccines to be affordable, accessible and equitable around the world,” she said.

And if it looks like funding will be falling short?

“Well, then, we’ll be on the phone, trying to encourage partners around the world to step up and to make a contribution. I know that we’re still waiting on announcements from some of significant players, and I’m confident that they’re going to deliver.”

Last spring, Canada assembled a group of experts on everything from public health to pharmaceuticals and charged them with advising the government on how to lock down a safe and effective vaccine as soon as possible.

But while members of this Vaccine Task Force maintain that their first job is to get a vaccine for Canadians, they believe in the need for global access, and for Canada to strike a balance between protecting its own while doing its part for the global community.

“We recognize that if the disease exists anywhere, it exists everywhere. So it’s also important, and our advice is around that, for Canada to support international global efforts,” says co-chair J. Mark Lievonen, who is also the former president of Sanofi Pasteur Ltd., the Canadian vaccine division of global biopharmaceutical company Sanofi.

How these vaccine deals start playing out is something that Nickerson, of Doctors Without Borders will be watching closely.

“If history is any indication of what can happen during a pandemic, I think that we ought to be concerned,” he said, nodding to the H1N1 pandemic, when a lot of the early vaccines, and only donated to other countries once their own needs were met.

In the same way that COVID has exposed the cracks in our education and health systems, he said that this pandemic risks underscoring how medication and health care are just easier to come by if you’re a richer country: “We need better systems of fair distribution and allocation, and pricing. It’s just not right.”

That said, he says COVAX, and Canada’s commitment, could be a meaningful step in the right direction.

“It’s clear that countries are striking these bilateral deals because they think that it’s the quickest way of gaining access, but there’s also a momentum behind COVAX that I don’t think that we’ve ever seen before,” he said.

“So if it’s properly funded, and if there is a fair, equitable allocation process, then I’m hopeful that this is the start of something good.”

With files from The Associated Press

Alex Boyd is a Calgary-based reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: .n.boyd

Barrie man jailed for manslaughter after supplying friend with deadly opioid

A 31-year-old Barrie man who unknowingly gave a friend a deadly synthetic opioid instead of cocaine was sentenced to 18 months in jail for manslaughter.

Justice Jonathan Bliss released his reasons for the sentence Oct. 30, saying while Robert Rodgers was remorseful for the overdose death of Darci Beers on Aug. 18, 2017, he failed to help her when she needed it most.

Bliss said there’s no doubt Rodgers believed the white powdery substance he shared with Beers and her neighbour was cocaine. 

When Beers ingested a substance she believed was cocaine but was actually U-47700, known as “Pinky” on the street, it had a fatal effect.

While Beers died in her apartment, Rodgers and the neighbour were both rendered unconscious, the sentencing report says.

When the neighbour awoke, he tried to perform CPR on Beers, who was on the kitchen floor.

The neighbour yelled at Rodgers to call 911, but instead he called his mother to come pick him up, Bliss wrote. Other neighbours came to help, speaking with dispatchers on the phone until paramedics arrived.

“All the while Mr. Rodgers did nothing. Mr. Rodgers was certainly emotional and remorseful during his interview with police, but when he needed to act, when he needed to demonstrate concern and empathy for someone other than himself, for something he was responsible for, he failed,” Bliss said.

Beers was the mother of a three-year-old boy.

Rodgers pleaded guilty after being charged with manslaughter and criminal negligence causing death in November 2017.

Rodgers told police he only knew his drug dealer as “Josh” and provided officers with the dealer’s phone number. However, police were unable to track the dealer down.

Bliss said despite Rodgers believing he was providing cocaine, he should have been wary of possible opioid substitutes.

Rodgers did not test the drug when he purchased it, and ended up suffering a small stroke when he consumed it, the court heard.

“It could not have been lost on him that cocaine is still a dangerous drug that alone could have been fatal, and, even in 2017, was being adulterated with other drugs with fatal consequences.” 

Rodgers was sentenced last February.

LIVE VIDEO: Ontario Premier Doug Ford provides daily update on COVID-19 November 18

In a news conference at Queen’s Park, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and provincial cabinet ministers Christine Elliott (health) and Dr. Merrilee Fullerton (long-term care) provide an update on their government’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 (coronavirus disease) pandemic. They are joined by Dr. David Williams, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health.

In Brampton, Mayor Patrick Brown and municipal officials provide an update on COVID-19 (coronavirus disease) in the city.

Today’s coronavirus news: U.S. new cases hit record; more Europeans hospitalized than ever; Ontario reports highest number of new cases ever

The latest news from Canada and around the world Saturday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.

6:15 p.m.: British Columbia’s provincial health officer says dangerously high and rapid increases in COVID-19 cases has forced a reversal of the restart plan for two weeks in the Vancouver Coastal and Fraser Health regions.

Dr. Bonnie Henry says residents in those areas need to significantly reduce their social activities in their homes, for travel, in indoor activities and at workplaces.

Henry says people in the area should be travelling only for essential reasons and there will be no social gatherings of any size with anyone other than those in their immediate household.

She says it’s essential for schools and businesses to remain open, and these new restrictions will allow that to happen.

B.C. recorded 567 cases on Saturday, adding to the 589 on Friday, the highest case counts seen in the province to date.

Henry calls the rising cases worrisome and says residents in those areas need to step back from the restart with urgent and focused actions to avoid serious consequences to the province.

4:03 p.m.: The United States set a record of more than 126,400 confirmed cases in a single day on Friday.

The seven-day rolling average of new daily cases in the U.S. is approaching 100,000 for the first time, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Total U.S. cases since the start of the pandemic are nearing 10 million, and confirmed cases globally are approaching 50 million.

Worldwide infection numbers are also setting records. The world reached 400,000 daily confirmed cases on Oct. 15; 500,000 on Oct. 26, and 600,000 on Friday.

2:53 p.m.: More Europeans are seriously ill with the coronavirus than ever before, new hospital data for 21 countries shows, surpassing the worst days in the spring and threatening to overwhelm stretched hospitals and exhausted medical workers.

New lockdowns have not yet stemmed the current influx of patients, which has only accelerated since it began growing in September, according to official counts of current patients collected by The New York Times. More than twice as many people in Europe are hospitalized with COVID-19 than in the United States, adjusted for population.

In the Czech Republic, the worst-hit nation in recent weeks, one in 1,300 people is currently hospitalized with COVID-19. And in Belgium, France, Italy and other countries in Western Europe, a new swell of patients has packed hospitals to levels last seen in March and April.

“Doctors and nurses could be forced to choose which patients to treat, who would live and who would die,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the House of Commons on Monday. “I am afraid the virus is doubling faster than we could ever conceivably add capacity.”

12:06 p.m.: Quebec reported 1,234 new cases on Saturday. Coupled with 28 new deaths and 875 recoveries, that leaves the active case total at 10,161 — exceeding 10,000 for the first time since May.

Elsewhere, Italy reported nearly 40,000 new cases, a new one-day record, and Poland reported more than 27,000 — likewise a record — and 349 deaths.

10:40 a.m.: Updates to the provincial numbers posted Saturday on Ontario’s COVID-19 page indicate 11 new deaths in the last day from the virus. The number of known active cases in the province is up by 269 to 8,667.

10:29 a.m.: Add one more name to the list of Toronto music venues shuttered for good during the pandemic. The Mod Club, open since 2002 at College and Crawford Sts., announced Friday night on social media that “our goal was always striving to bring big smiles, positive vibrations and memories that will last a lifetime.”

The capacity-620 concert hall had been the site of memorable concerts in the past, including in 2011 the by Abel Tesfaye, alias The Weeknd, after his first mixtape “House of Balloons” caused an international sensation. Leslie Feist, played an pre-stardom show there in 2004.

The Orbit Room, Alleycatz and others have announced their permanent demise, as the pandemic kills touring and indoor live performance. A report last month said that 11 Toronto venues had closed since the initial lockdown in mid-March.

10:20 a.m.: Ontario is reporting 1,132 new cases this morning, according to provincial Health Minister Christine Elliott — and that number is a new single-day high for the province.

Locally, she reported on Twitter, there are 336 new cases in Toronto, 258 in Peel, 114 in York Region, 78 in Ottawa, 64 in Halton and 55 in Hamilton. There are 852 more resolved cases and nearly 39,200 tests completed.

7:38 a.m.: There are 255,809 confirmed cases in Canada.

Quebec: 112,189 confirmed (including 6,403 deaths, 95,956 resolved)

Ontario: 81,693 confirmed (including 3,209 deaths, 70,086 resolved)

Alberta: 31,858 confirmed (including 352 deaths, 24,684 resolved)

British Columbia: 17,149 confirmed (including 275 deaths, 13,035 resolved)

Manitoba: 7,419 confirmed (including 96 deaths, 3,037 resolved)

Saskatchewan: 3,623 confirmed (including 25 deaths, 2,634 resolved)

Nova Scotia: 1,121 confirmed (including 65 deaths, 1,040 resolved)

New Brunswick: 350 confirmed (including 6 deaths, 320 resolved)

Newfoundland and Labrador: 294 confirmed (including 4 deaths, 285 resolved)

Prince Edward Island: 66 confirmed (including 64 resolved)

Yukon: 23 confirmed (including 1 death, 20 resolved)

Repatriated Canadians: 13 confirmed (including 13 resolved)

Northwest Territories: 10 confirmed (including 10 resolved)

Nunavut: 1 confirmed

Total: 255,809 (0 presumptive, 255,809 confirmed including 10,436 deaths, 211,184 resolved)

7:37 a.m.: British Columbia’s provincial health officer and health minister are holding a rare weekend news conference today amid a dramatic spike in COVID-19 cases.

Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix will speak at 1 p.m. although there is no word yet on what will be announced.

In a news conference earlier this week, Henry had said they were talking with health authorities about possibly bringing in region specific restrictions, if necessary.

B.C. reported 589 new COVID-19 cases on Friday, up from 425 on Thursday and 334 on Wednesday.

The province also reported two new deaths on Friday, bringing the total to 275.

Less than two weeks ago, Henry brought in new restrictions limiting the number of people in homes to the occupants plus their “safe six” when cases began spiking in the Fraser Health region.

7:36 a.m.: Health measures are loosening in several COVID-19 hot spots today as Ontario’s new tiered system takes effect.

The colour-coded system — which classifies each public health unit as a red, orange, yellow or green zone based on caseload and transmission levels — came into force at midnight, as previous measures imposed on a handful of hot spots were set to expire.

Only Peel Region, which has seen rising cases in recent weeks, was deemed a red zone, while other hot spots such as York Region and Ottawa were labelled as orange.

Regions in the red category have, among other things, indoor restaurant dining limited to 10 people and gyms limited to 10 people indoors.

The orange level limits bars and restaurants to 50 people indoors, with no more than four seated together.

Health officials in Peel had asked that the region remain under a modified Stage 2 — the restriction classification system previously used by the government — which involves more stringent rules such as a ban on indoor dining in restaurants and bars.

Toronto will stay in modified Stage 2 for another week.

7:35 a.m.: Malaysia’s government said Saturday that it will expand movement restrictions to most parts of the country, with coronavirus cases nearly tripling over the past month.

Another 1,168 new cases were reported Saturday, bringing Malaysia’s total tally to 39,357 — compared to just 13,993 a month ago.

Senior Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob said all of peninsula Malaysia except for three states will be placed under a conditional movement control order from Monday until Dec. 6. He said the move will help curb the virus spread and allow targeted screening to be done.

7:34 a.m.: Germany’s disease control centre is reporting a new daily record in new coronavirus infections as the pandemic continues to spread through the country.

The Robert Koch Institute said Saturday that Germany’s states reported 23,300 new cases overnight, surpassing the record of 21,506 set the day before, which was the first time the country had registered more than 20,000 daily cases.

It said another 130 people died from the virus, a number that has also been trending upward but remains far lower than the high of 315 deaths reported one day in April.

Alarmed by the rapid rise in numbers, Germany has imposed significant new restrictions to prevent the health system from being overwhelmed. A four-week partial shutdown took effect on Monday, with bars, restaurants, leisure and sports facilities being closed and new contact restrictions imposed. Shops and schools remain open.

Germany has overall recorded 642,488 coronavirus infections since the start of the pandemic with 11,226 deaths.

7:33 a.m.: The Australian state of Victoria had its eighth day in a row of no new virus cases or deaths, ahead of another move back to normal living including no limits on travel outside of Melbourne and the resumption of flights to New Zealand.

Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews is expected to announce another relaxation of rules on Sunday, including the removal of Melbourne’s so-called “ring of steel.” No longer confined within a 25-kilometre (15-mile) radius, the city’s residents will be allowed to travel throughout the state.

Travel freedom is expected to expand again when the border with New South Wales state reopens to Victorians on Nov. 23.

“They will be big steps, they’ll get us much closer to normal than we’ve been for six or seven months, which is very significant,” Andrews said.

On Monday, the state will see the resumption of direct flights from New Zealand, the first international flights into Melbourne since June 30.

7:31 a.m.: President Donald Trump’s Chief of Staff Mark Meadows has been diagnosed with the coronavirus as the nation sets daily records for confirmed cases for the pandemic.

Two senior administration officials confirmed Friday that Meadows had tested positive for the virus, which has killed more than 236,000 Americans so far this year. They offered no details on when the chief of staff came down with the virus or his current condition. His diagnosis was first reported by Bloomberg.

Meadows travelled with Trump in the run-up to Election Day and last appeared in public early Wednesday morning without a mask as Trump falsely declared victory in the vote count. He had been one of the close aides around Trump when the president came down with the virus more than a month ago, but was tested daily and maintained his regular work schedule.

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Man dead after fatal crash in Tiny Township

An 81-year-old Tiny Township man is dead after being struck by a car on Nov. 16.

Southern Georgian Bay OPP have identified the man as Donald Wilcox.

Members of the OPP responded to the incident on Baseline Road, between Concession 6 and Downers Road, at around 6:15 p.m. Officers were joined by County of Simcoe paramedics and Township of Tiny Fire Services.

Emergency personnel located Wilcox, who had been struck by a southbound car while walking on Baseline Road. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Baseline Road was closed between Mertz Road and Concession Road 6 until 12:30 a.m. to give the OPP central region technical traffic investigation unit space to investigate the cause of the crash.