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‘We all keep each other accountable’: How university roommates have handled COVID-19 precautions as Thanksgiving looms

In a townhouse near Wilfrid Laurier University, 21-year-old student Ryan Lane lives with his four roommates, and — more often than not — three of their significant others. It is, Lane said, “a pretty packed house.” So, they’ve been trying this fall to keep their bubble tight.

That meant no outside friends, unless the visit was in their yard out back. They have a group chat to coordinate which floor of the house has to be quiet and when, to work with each of their Zoom call requirements and give space when someone has to study or write a midterm.

“We all keep each other accountable, and before we go out and do anything that would be out of the ordinary, we make sure we check with everyone, and make sure everyone’s comfortable,” said Lane.

If they didn’t trust even one or two housemates to follow the rules, the arrangement would fall apart. “This is something we talked about coming into September…I’m not going to come back here if we’re not going to be safe.”

As students approach the first long weekend of the school year, a time when many traditionally head home for Thanksgiving, the Star checked in with several students living in larger houses about how they’ve been managing pandemic precautions and studying from home — as well as the potential risks to their families if they return home from campus for the weekend.

Lane noted that one of his family members is immunocompromised, and that risk had informed his choices about exposure since returning to school — he wanted to be able to visit over the coming long weekend without worrying about harming them.

Each of the students who spoke to the Star said they believed their house was taking public health considerations seriously — though several acknowledged that they’d been inside the same house with more than 10 people since returning to campus.

Other students, in their view, were being less responsible.

“I definitely don’t think people are being safe and taking this seriously at all,” said Cassidy McMackon, a fifth-year student at Queen’s University. “I had a guy on Tinder say, actually, ‘I’m having a party tonight, do you want to come?’”

McMackon pointed to a house party that took place on Sept. 18, which had been connected to at least five COVID-19 cases by Oct. 1.

Some of the individuals associated with that party were Queen’s students, the local public health unit confirmed to the Star. The university said that 20 cases from the “campus community” have been reported to them between Aug. 31 and Oct. 4, including 10 last week.

McMackon said she lives with three other Queen’s students and a member of the military. Three of them had significant others, all of whom had visited — two lived locally and one had been back and forth from Sudbury.

Then there were their friends. “I have one friend who’s come over a couple times, and then there’s been two other people we’ve been seeing,” she said. Two of those friends live together, while the other lived in a separate house. She said she’d visited his home since returning to school, and wasn’t too concerned about exposure to his other housemates.

“I do think the people that are really behaving themselves, for lack of a better word, are suffering,” said McMackon.

Before public health began advising households only to see one another, when circles of 10 were allowed, she said larger houses were unable to have friends over and might be forced to choose how many housemates could see their significant others.

“I think it definitely presents challenges, especially because if (even) one person in the house comes into contact with a COVID case, everyone else is kind of screwed over,” she said.

McMackon said some of her housemates plan to spend Thanksgiving in the GTA, but said she trusted them all to be safe. “I’m not worried about when they come back,” she added.

Toronto Mayor John Tory, on CP24 Monday, urged families not to convene with university-aged kids for the holiday.

“Unfortunately, that is the advice…they’re going to come home into a setting with their parents who might be up into that age range where, you know, there’s a vulnerability there,” said Tory.

But Luke Jin, 21, a student at the University of Toronto’s Scarborough campus, said he doesn’t believe that message has been communicated adequately to postsecondary students — including himself.

The first he heard of that advice was from a Star reporter, he said. Lane, too, said he hadn’t heard the guidance about Thanksgiving before being asked about it on Tuesday.

If the rules were “set in stone,” Jin said that he and his housemates would follow them, but his plans until that point had been to visit his family in Ottawa over the coming weekend.

He and his three housemates have been around roughly 15 people recently, he said — including the four of them. All of those friends either lived with each other or on their own, he added.

Earlier in the fall, they’d had events like cookouts at their house, but whittled them back as cases began to climb. “Especially because reading week and Thanksgiving are coming up,” Jin said. “It’s not like we want to pass it to our families, who I guess are higher risk than us.”

Jim Dunn, chair of McMaster’s department of health, aging and society, said it wasn’t surprising to him that Jin didn’t know what the public health guidance was for Thanksgiving. He pointed out that Ontario’s chief medical officer of health last week by advising people to ensure their turkeys were fully cooked.

“What shocks me about the current situation is there seems to be an incredible reluctance to tell people specifically what to do,” Dunn said.

The province has since advised households not to mix during Thanksgiving, with Minister of Colleges and Universities Ross Romano saying Tuesday that students should stay put this weekend.

“They are young adults, and I trust that they will make smart decisions,” he said. “I trust that they are going to respect their own health and safety, and the health and safety of their family and their extended family.” 

Dunn pointed to a as an example of how activities that would be seen as “quite innocent” in usual times could contribute to outbreaks. Eleven cases within the outbreak were linked to three student houses.

If students were living in larger houses, Dunn said there should be clear communication not to interact with anybody else, or travel home to visit family this weekend.

“Have a Thanksgiving with only your roommates,” Dunn said. “That’s one way to manage your risk.”

With files from Ann Marie Elpa and Kris Rushowy

Victoria Gibson is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering affordable housing. Her reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Reach her via email:

COVID-19 vaccines pose new transportation challenges. Canadian innovators are stepping up

OTTAWA —One week. Two vaccines heralding promise. Maybe three more months before COVID-19 vaccine jabs could start being delivered to somewhere in Canada.

Canada took another step toward that milestone Monday when the federal government announced the names of four main bidders who have been selected to compete for the contracts to deliver a vaccine or vaccines — once approved by Health Canada — to Canadians.

On Monday, the Canadian military also flagged that it is now on standby to help.

And meanwhile, just as happened in the spring, Canadian companies and innovators with outside-the-box solutions are stepping up to offer to help in Ottawa’s looming dilemma of how to store, transport and distribute potentially more than 70 million vaccine doses that have unique cold storage requirements.

The two front-runner vaccine candidates that have reported promising early results are developed by Pfizer and Moderna.

Pfizer’s potential vaccine needs “ultracold” storage at -80C. Moderna’s requires -20 C for long-term shipping and storage but remains stable at 2 C to 8 C, the temperature of a standard home or medical refrigerator, for up to 30 days. Moderna says that allows for storage at most pharmacies, hospitals or physicians’ offices. Once the vaccine is removed from the refrigerator for administration, the company says it can be kept at room temperature conditions for up to 12 hours.

Flavio Volpe, head of Canada’s auto supply manufacturers association, quietly cast around last week for creative solutions to the “ultracold” freezer puzzle. Then he went public, posting on Twitter that he was trying to crowdsource ideas for Ottawa’s decision-makers. He’d done the same thing last spring when a shortage of personal protective equipment and ventilators became apparent in the first wave.

“In the end, we may not be able to help here, but if we can help people get a vaccine within a month, two months, 10 months or more before things would happen naturally, why wouldn’t we?” Volpe said in an interview. “We all have a stake in getting things back to normal.”

Almost immediately, his call was answered.

Texts and emails landed from a range of companies: auto suppliers that make specialized Styrofoam that could be used for dry-ice containers; companies that already make high-grade Styrofoam containers for the delicate shipping of organs for transplant; companies that manage the shipping and transport of frozen agricultural products like bull semen; and companies that make compressors and condensers, and are investigating whether they can be upgraded and adapted.

Jim Estill of Danby Appliances tweeted back his company is making -80 C freezers. “How many do you want?” he asked.

Reached Monday, Estill said his company is about to roll out a new ultracold freezer, developed in the past 90 days, that will cost an estimated $10,000 apiece.

Estill is talking to the companies aiming to lead the distribution effort. “None of them make freezers. We make freezers. So they need freezers — that’s the bottom line.

“What we don’t know yet is how they’re planning on distributing it,” said Estill. “Are they going to put everything in Toronto and then shoot it out to London from there or are they going to put one in every hospital, one in every pharmacy?

“The logistics of getting everything around, this is going to be the next crisis, to get this done.”

In Victoria, Peter Evans heads up CryoLogistics Refrigeration Technologies Ltd. which has developed a large vacuum-insulated freezer container that runs on liquid carbon dioxide, can hold a pallet-full of product, and keep it frozen or chilled without having to be plugged in to a power supply or generator. His company is also in the running to subcontract as a supplier to the companies seeking to distribute the vaccine.

The technology for the “SnowShip Sytem” has been in development for about four years, and the company is about to begin commercial production. Evans believes it can provide a solution for some of the delivery challenges COVID-19 vaccines pose.

The container operates by converting liquid carbon dioxide to a solid within the container, generating dry ice. It can do the conversion at a steady, predictable rate, and can be programmed to reach the temperature required by whatever product is stored inside, temperatures from the 2 C to 8 C degree range down to -70 C or -80 C. “We were not thinking COVID when we developed our product,” he said. Now they are.

Evans said the federal and provincial governments and the companies vying to provide the logistics for the operation are looking to scale quickly.

“Nobody really knows what this is going to look like,” he said. “We’re looking to scale the production of these things rapidly if the need arises, and if there’s contracts, obviously we’re going to make it work.”

“We’ve got a few weeks to map this out.”

With files from Kieran Leavitt

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

NYC has just shuttered its entire public school system. Where is Toronto headed?

Ontario’s premier is warning that hot spots are potentially days away from a lockdown, community cases are soaring, and the education minister has publicly contemplated extending winter break.

But the halls of the Toronto high school where Dieter Hartill works are unusually calm.

All the kids are wearing masks, muffling their speech. While about 80 per cent are still attending in-person classes, only half come each morning as part of the adapted schedule to reduce contact.

“There’s a lot less life,” said Hartill, a guidance counsellor. “The school is a quiet place now.”

A recent string of COVID-19 cases in students at the school “created a lot of fear and concern,” but a full-blown outbreak was avoided.

So far, the apocalyptic spread of COVID-19 in schools feared by many parents and teachers has not materialized. Toronto’s Medical Officer of Health Dr. Eileen de Villa has said schools don’t seem to be drivers of infection.

To date, there have been 1,115 cases in students and staff in nearly 440 English-language public and Catholic schools in Toronto — including 38 outbreaks, according to an independent database maintained by a group of volunteers that includes several scientists and analyzed by the Star.

There are almost 800 schools between the two boards. In the Toronto Catholic board there are about 43,000 students physically attending class and another 22,300 secondary students going to school; in the public board there are approximately 107,300 students in school in elementary and another 54,300 students physically attending high school.

At Etobicoke’s Martingrove Collegiate Institute, where Hartill works, there have been 11 recent student cases, eight of which were linked to an event that occurred outside school grounds; those cases did not translate into an outbreak (defined as two or more cases in the school with an epidemiological link within a two-week period.)

But with community transmission raging out of control, Hartill wonders how long schools can hold out. Recent cases in schools have also been slowly but steadily rising across the province. New York City announced the closure of its entire public school system on Wednesday.

The sad news of the death of a staff member due to COVID-19 at St. Francis de Sales Catholic School in Toronto’s hard-hit northwest corner was confirmed by the board the same day, but was not the result of any outbreak at the school.

“You don’t know what’s happening, especially as the community cases keep rising so much, and it looks like (schools are) going to be the last ones to close,” Hartill said.

It wasn’t that long ago, the end of October, that COVID-19 cases in Toronto Catholic and public schools numbered close to 600. Cases had just begun to appear in Lester B. Pearson Collegiate Institute in the public board, where an outbreak would later be declared. And there were single cases mounting at Glamorgan Junior Public School, which by then had two cases in students and nine in staff. The school now has a total of 14 cumulative cases.

After days of speculation over whether Ontario schools would close for an extended winter break, and comments from Premier Doug Ford that hinted they might, Education Minister Stephen Lecce said Wednesday it wasn’t necessary after consulting with the Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. David Williams and the Public Health Measures Table.

Asked about the change in position at a press conference Wednesday, Ford said the safest place for kids is in schools.

“So far, knock on wood, it’s working fairly well,” he told reporters, even as hot spots are “staring down the barrel of another lockdown.”

But as it crossed that threshold, officials there announced that the entire public system would be shuttering and moving online.

In Toronto, the weekly average positivity rate — the percentage of people tested for COVID-19 who are found to have the virus — is already 6.2 per cent, with 14 neighbourhoods above nine per cent, according to an by the Toronto-based non-profit ICES (formerly the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Science).

Even if schools are not the drivers, it’s clear some community transmission is making its way into schools. So at what point does it tip over? And how close are we to that point?

Ahmed Al-Jaishi, a London, Ont.-based epidemiologist and PhD candidate at McMaster University, is part of a called COVID Schools Canada that has been tracking every school case and outbreak across the country.

Each report is linked to supporting evidence, such as a school board letter to parents, a notification on the school board or public health website, a provincial report, or media updates. The group’s goal is to increase transparency about risk in schools, a project they started before the

The team found 140 outbreaks within 134 schools across the province, so it’s not like schools are “completely safe,” Al-Jaishi said, but noted we don’t know the full-extent of school-related transmission because some outbreaks are missed (no contact tracing or lack of testing) or not reported.

Given the relatively low number of outbreaks compared to the number of schools in Ontario, closing schools should be a “last resort,” Al-Jaishi said.

“We do need to continue pushing for safer policies, like smaller class size, better ventilation and rapid testing” so that kids who are potentially infected could be removed from classrooms right away, he said.

At a certain point though, if community cases continue to rise, they will make their way into schools and there will be more outbreaks. “It’s almost like game over because we will have to close the school down,” he said, “especially in the hot-spot regions.”

In New York City, the three per cent positivity rate is controversial, with some pushing for the city to accept more risk in schools given their value to parents, kids and society, especially with indoor dining still permitted. Asked what the threshold was for Ontario, Ministry of Education spokesperson Caitlin Clark did not provide one and said the government will continue to follow advice from the Chief Medical Officer of Health and the COVID-19 command table.

“It is crucial that we keep in mind just how important in-class learning is for teachers and students,” said Liz Stuart, president of the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Association. “While teachers are doing everything they can to make remote learning as effective as possible, there is no substitute for in-person interaction between teachers and students, and between students and their peers.”

She noted that there are also concerns about equity, security, privacy, and excessive screen time, especially given the government’s mandate around synchronous online instruction. At the same time “we desperately need (the government) to also acknowledge their responsibility to implement all reasonable safety precautions.”

So far schools have been “remarkably successful at minimizing outbreaks,” Education Minister Lecce said in his Wednesday statement, nixing the idea of an extended holiday break, but added his government will continue to consider “any option” when it comes to schools.

An extended break could provide a buffer between busy classrooms and visiting grandma and grandpa, said Dr. Janine McCready, an infectious disease specialist at Michael Garron Hospital.

“The more introductions that you have in schools, the more likely you’re going to have one of those sparks cause other people to get infected and if you have very high rates, it’s kind of a statistical inevitability that you’re going to have spread,” she said.

While there haven’t been large numbers of outbreaks in schools, she said she worries we may be missing some of the picture. It can be very hard to know where the chain of infection started if, for example, a parent tests positive and then a kid without symptoms does as well — especially when so many kids are asymptomatic.

The province issued a reminder to principals on Tuesday that they are responsible for notifying the province of COVID-19 cases through an online reporting tool. Principals are expected to report cases by 10:30 a.m. every day when school is open.

“It is critical that boards continue to use the absence reporting tool in order to ensure the most up-to-date and accurate information is available,” said Deputy Education Minister Nancy Naylor, in an memo to education unions Wednesday.

While Toronto Public Health is still contact tracing when it comes to cases in schools, it has not yet resumed full tracing in the community. But there is a plan to scale up soon, said Dr. Vinita Dubey, Associate Medical Officer of Health.

Each case of COVID-19 in a school sparks a “detailed and careful investigation” to determine where the person got it and where they may have spread it, she added. “When a case is identified in a school, the school cohort (classroom, bus, after- or before-school program) is dismissed, and often recommended to go for testing.”

McCready agreed with Al-Jaishi that, given the value of schools, they should be kept as safe as possible and kept open as long as possible.

were loosened in October to let kids with runny noses and other short-term symptoms attend without a COVID test. This has resulted in a lot of confusion, McCready said, and should be reconsidered given “out of control” case numbers in the community.

She added that Toronto Public Health should also adopt a policy that if one person in a family has symptoms or exposure, the entire household should stay home while awaiting test results. McCready said she has seen a lot of cases where kids will go to school even when someone in their family is showing symptoms and eventually test positive.

Current TPH guidance states that if someone in a household has symptoms, they should get tested, “but others in the household can still attend school, as long as the person with symptoms was not a close contact,” said Dubey.

There are 24 active outbreaks in Toronto schools and she said there is a “basis to believe” public health measures in schools such as masks and physical distancing are working.

The Toronto District School Board has had 781 cases as of Nov. 16, (623 in students) and (158 in staff) and 26 outbreaks. It approved the spending of $30 million from its reserve funds to lower class sizes and prioritize areas at higher risk for COVID-19, where classes were reduced even further, said spokesperson Ryan Bird.

At the Toronto Catholic District School Board there have been 334 total cases (281 in students and 53 in staff) and 12 outbreaks. Trustee Maria Rizzo said she supports keeping schools open for the sake of students’ mental health, but is “worried.”

She’d also like to see an extended winter break to make sure cases caused by holiday gatherings don’t spread into schools.

The science on COVID-19 so far suggests that kids are more likely to have very mild symptoms or none at all, and very unlikely to get seriously ill or die. The picture on whether they transmit the disease the same way adults do is more muddled. One recent study in further complicated things by finding that three Australian children were infected with COVID-19 but kept testing negative.

de Villa reported that the positivity rate in kids aged 14-17 (7.6 per cent) was higher than younger kids aged 4-13 (4.7 per cent). McCready said high school and middle-schoolers getting together before or after school may be driving some of that.

Anne-Marie King, a Grade 11 and 12 religion teacher at St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School in Scarborough, said she wonders why all classes aren’t online at this point. Her school has seen 11 COVID-19 cases.

“Whatever I’m doing in class where my safety is at risk, I can sit at home in the safety of my house and do online. It’s still interactive, but there’s no physical contact,” said King, who also worries about the health of her 78-year-old mother, with whom she lives.

She said there are rules in place to promote safety, but “they aren’t realistic.” King teaches in a portable where physical distancing is limited to just one metre because there simply isn’t enough space, she said. And, with no running water in the portable, she can’t wash her hands regularly.

King added that many students and teachers are burning out under the pressure to cram the curriculum into a short nine-week period.

Harvey Bischof, president of the OSSTF, said the worry in classrooms is “tipping over” into fear for some teachers as community cases rise.

There is still a need to reduce class sizes to conform to physical distancing rules in every other public space in the province, as well as provincial standards around ventilation, masking and busing,” he said. In October, the Ontario Labour Relations Board dismissed an by the province’s four major teachers unions (AEFO, ETFO, OECTA, OSSTF/FEESO) that sought to establish provincewide standards in these areas.

“I’m grateful so far that any school spread has been by all accounts relatively limited and not the worst-case scenario that we thought could potentially occur. But that said, as we go up to unprecedentedly high levels within the community, that just means introduction into vastly more schools and more chances of these occurrences happening,” Bischof said.

Editor’s note — Nov. 19, 2020: This story was edited to clarify how cases in schools are tracked by COVID Schools Canada.

With files from Michele Henry and Noor Javed

Patty Winsa is a Toronto-based data reporter for the Star. Reach her via email:

Kenyon Wallace is a Toronto-based investigative reporter for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @KenyonWallace or reach him via email:

May Warren is a Toronto-based breaking news reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: