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Pair arrested for string of thefts, mischiefs on Midland street

Two people have been charged in connection to a string of thefts and mischief incidents on Midland’s King Street.

A little before 5 a.m. on Oct. 19, officers were called to the King Street Hotel to investigate the theft of a motorcycle.

That led officers to locate and arrest a suspect who was attempting to commit another offence at a home on the street, police said. After a search, police found the suspect in possession of blue fentanyl.

Later in the morning, a King Street auto dealership reported that a number of vehicles awaiting repairs had been damaged, and some had been entered.

As a result of video surveillance, officers were able to identify two suspects.

A 31-year-old Penetanguishene man has been charged with six counts of mischief, theft under $5,000, trespassing and possession of an opioid.

He was held for a video bail hearing and will appear in court on Nov. 26.

A second person was arrested on Oct. 29.

A 31-year-old Midland man has been charged with six counts of mischief, and theft under $5,000

He was held for a video bail hearing and will appear in court on Dec. 3

‘It’s a monster of a virus’: What these Ontario COVID-19 survivors want you to know about the virus — and how to make it through the second wave

As Ruth Castellanos watched cases of the strange new virus that had shut down China, then Italy and Spain, rise in Ontario last spring, she felt a pang of fear.

“I started thinking, ‘Oh my goodness,’ ” remembers the 38-year-old. “ ‘I hope it doesn’t get as bad here.’ ”

She couldn’t have known at that moment that she would soon become a case herself, part of a first wave of infected in the province who faced a terrifying disease that doctors knew little about.

Now, as they watch cases spike again, those patients have unique insights for those who will get this fall. People who, like them, will suddenly find themselves with strange symptoms or a positive test. And who can hopefully learn from them about everything from the importance of getting tested to the range of outcomes — and the little things that make it a bit easier to cope.

When Castellanos, a Hamilton college instructor who’s still unable to work, first became ill in May, she thought it would be over in a few weeks.

She thought it was just a respiratory virus.

She was wrong.

Still facing a constant “bombardment” of symptoms, from brain fog to a racing heart rate, she wants others to know that they can last for months.

“If you’re feeling any symptoms that you never felt before, fight for yourself to get help and get treated, because it’s not in your head,” she said.

“It’s affecting your brain, your heart, your organs, your stomach — it’s affecting everything.”

Castellanos, once an active avid gardener who now gets exhausted making dinner, is part of a group that call themselves “long-haulers,” people still struggling with lingering symptoms of the virus.

She said it’s important to know that if you’re not critical, you’ll be largely left to fend for yourself at home. She made it through with the support of her husband, and her dog, Buttons, who never left her side.

She tried to take her mind off the situation by watching funny shows, like all 60 episodes of a Spanish soap opera, and freezing meals, so they’d be available on days she was too tired to cook.

It’s also good to have people you can count on “on speed dial in case you need help,” she said.

Castellanos eventually tested negative. If too much time elapses between the first symptoms and testing, this can happen, experts say. She was told by one doctor she definitely had COVID-19, a clinical diagnosis she feels should be treated as just as important as a positive test, especially as testing was not open to everyone in the early days of the pandemic in the province.

She eventually found a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist on her own to consult about her persistent symptoms. Her advice is to “seek medical help, and if you’re denied, keep pushing.”

If a family doctor doesn’t have the answers, ask them to send you to someone who might know more, she said.

Getting tested quickly is one of the most important things to do, said Susie Goulding, another long-hauler, so that a lack of a positive test is not a barrier to care later.

Goulding, who’s also been struggling with a range of symptoms since late March, initially did not qualify for testing, because she hadn’t travelled and didn’t have a fever.

Although, like Castellanos, she was also told by a doctor to assume it was COVID-19, she was negative by the time she finally got the test.

“You need to go right away and get tested, because if you don’t get tested and if you have it, you could potentially end up a long-hauler and you might have difficulty trying to convince people that you actually have COVID-19,” said the 52-year-old Oakville floral designer, who’s still not able to work.

“A proper diagnosis is key.”

She also recommends having Tylenol, a thermometer and a pulse oximeter, a small device that measures oxygen levels in the blood at home.

But it’s hard to prepare in advance, because “the thing is that everybody displays such different symptoms.”

It’s like “putting your hand into a grab bag and pulling out a fistful of symptoms and that will be how your body reacts and how your COVID-19 journey is going to be,” she said.

It’s also important to look out for mental health, and get support for the anxiety and depression that might follow the isolation and trauma related to COVID-19, she added.

In June, Goulding started on Facebook, which now has more than 4,000 members. It’s been critical, she said, to connect with other survivors from across the country, who can share experiences, advice, research — even the names of specialists or studies that they’re involved in. This peer support has been essential, she said, especially as long-haulers are left without a one-stop shop for followup care. They’ve had to advocate for themselves, as they realized in real time just how devastating COVID-19 can be.

“I never thought in a million years that I would catch it,” she added. “It’s a monster of a virus.”

That’s something Heidi Robertson knows all too well. Her husband Torry, a nurse who worked in Michigan, across the border from their LaSalle, Ont. home near Windsor, got COVID-19 in March.

The 46-year-old “basketball dad” and “big teddy bear” “never got sick prior to this,” she said. Other than high blood pressure, he didn’t have any underlying medical conditions.

She warns others not to assume that just because they’re younger and healthy that they’ll be fine.

For Torry, shortness of breath was a later symptom, after vomiting, fever, loss of taste and smell, and diarrhea, but things quickly went downhill after that started.

He was taken to the hospital in an ambulance at the end of March.

Weeks before, he had told his wife that he didn’t want to be put on a ventilator if he got the virus.

In early April, over FaceTime, after doctors told her it was needed, she asked him if he’d changed his mind.

“He looked at me — he looked so weak — and he said, ‘I’m OK with it.’ He said, ‘Tell all the kids I love them, and I love you,’ and that was it,” she remembered

He spent seven terrifying weeks in the ICU, and 38 days on the ventilator, going into kidney failure at one point and needing dialysis.

During that time, Robertson said she stopped going on social media and reading about other cases online. Instead, she only listened to the doctors and nurses treating him, cutting out all the noise.

Torry was discharged from Hôtel-Dieu Grace Healthcare in Windsor earlier this month, but is left with a severe brain injury that has impacted his speech and balance. He’s continuing outpatient rehab.

“We just take it day-by-day,” Robertson said, adding she’ll always be grateful to the team that saved his life. “It’s been such a long road, and we have so much more to go.”

She’d tell others in the same spot to just keep putting one foot in front of the other, try to stay positive and have faith, even in the face of so many unknowns.

“Ask a lot of questions of the doctors,” she added, “and let the doctors know anything that has been going on with your loved one.”

Most people will not have such dramatic tales of COVID-19. For some, there will be no symptoms.

For others, it will feel like almost nothing.

But, said 20-year-old Hannah Abrahamse, that doesn’t mean it’s something to take lightly.

The Trent University English major was studying abroad in England when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Canadians to get home fast. She threw a few things into a suitcase and arrived in Toronto in late March, isolating in her grandmother’s empty house in Orillia.

About 10 days in, she started noticing a stuffy nose. She was sneezing, with watery eyes, a headache, a little bit of a sore throat, but no fever or cough.

Fearing for her mom and brother, who are immunocompromised, she pushed to get tested, and was turned away from an Orillia assessment centre twice because her symptoms weren’t serious enough.

Finally, after a referral from a family doctor, she got the test in early April and was stunned at the result: positive.

“I wasn’t even really concerned at all by my symptoms, because I didn’t feel very sick. I just thought, ‘Oh, this is really weird and bad timing. I have these bad allergies, probably because I’m back in Canada,’ ” she remembered.

“It was a good thing that I did, because otherwise I wouldn’t have known that I had COVID-19.”

She’d advise others to do the same.

The worst part of a mild bout with the disease, she said, was the isolation.

Watching the Netflix documentary ‘Tiger King’, doing lots of YouTube yoga, FaceTiming friends, and porch-drops of chocolate chip cookies from an aunt helped pass the time.

“I was glad to do it to keep everybody safe,” she said.

“What I want to make clear is it’s not about you, it’s about other people.”

Abrahamse was in a position where she could clearly see the chain of possible transmission, from herself to her mom or brother, and how her actions would directly impact others.

Many people might not see that so clearly, she said, but it will still be there.

She’s been hearing about some of her peers lately who are going to parties or seeing lots of different people every night — who shrug and assume since they’re young, they’ll be fine.

“And that’s really frustrating, especially because you can get it and not know if you don’t take your symptoms seriously, or you can be totally asymptomatic,” she said.

The best advice, agrees long-hauler Goulding, is to try not to get COVID-19 in the first place, so that you don’t pass it on to anyone else, or risk a complicated battle with it yourself.

“Take all precautions in trying to avoid it,” she said, “Like the plague that it is.”

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

Martin Regg Cohn: Unmasked amid COVID-19, Sam Oosterhoff is a politician of faith who lost face

Let us forgive Sam Oosterhoff for committing the cardinal sin of hypocrisy. Seriously.

He has been unmasked — huddling , in defiance of his own government’s guidelines. A revelation on social media for all to see — a politician of faith losing face on Facebook, until he deleted his photo-op.

The moral of the story? Do unto others, and breathe unto others, as you would have them breathe unto you.

Behold, : “I should have worn a mask when we took a quick pic, given the proximity of everyone, and I apologize for failing to do so.”

Oosterhoff is not the first public figure guilty of a breach of faith, nor will he be the last to stray from the true path. Many federal politicians more famous than he — from — have revealed themselves as two-faced, exposing their faces in public places while exhorting all others to mask themselves.

Premier Doug Ford has forgiven him his sins. But before this episode is forgotten, Oosterhoff has an opportunity to atone — by making amends.

While his faith warns of the Antichrist, Oosterhoff can be the antibody who inoculates everybody — the embodiment of an antiviral, a proselytizer in a pandemic, a preacher for true believers, a role model for fellow travellers in the Progressive Conservative movement.

We worry about all those who worship the false idols of immunity and immortality, so who better than the moralizing Oosterhoff — always avowedly pro-life — to take a vow of fidelity to save lives in mid-pandemic? Surely that is the moral of the story here.

First elected as an MPP in 2016 at the tender age of 19, thanks to the embrace of the Canadian Reformed Church flock in his Niagara riding, he has long worn his faith on his sleeve and put his heart and soul into his politics. Forever chaste, belatedly chastened, he has now seen the light.

Henceforth, Oosterhoff shall go forth and disseminate the public health mission of saving people from themselves, shielding them from the evil of the virus, the sin of temptation and the folly of defiance in the time of COVID-19. On this matter of life and death, Oosterhoff could be a true servant of the Lord, not just Ford.

As a man of faith, who better to make the case to his fellow worshippers to pray at home, not in a house of worship?

With COVID-19 cases rising inexorably, the danger is growing in places where people congregate. That’s why you hear public health officials fretting about “congregate care” in nursing homes, but houses of worship are also places of congregate caring.

That’s why they’re called congregations. After all, fellowship is part of worship in the best of times.

But the worst of times are no ordinary times. Gyms and restaurants are facing new restrictions, called upon to make enormous economic sacrifices to keep people apart.

It’s worth asking why churches and synagogues, temples and gurdwaras, are still allowing people to make sacrifices of themselves in the middle of a plague. Yes, many religious leaders insist they are faithfully following the path of social distancing, but at a time of heightened anxiety, when public health officials are demanding maximum restraint — asking people to avoid work and stay at home — why risk the peril of prayer in public places?

If people can stay connected to their friends and officemates remotely via the new technology of Zoom, why not stay connected to God through the timeless miracle of remote prayer? Why risk infecting others by inflicting themselves on a house of worship, rather than worshipping from home via Wi-Fi?

Faith demands sacrifices, but surely the life of no human being is worth sacrificing to a supreme being. Church choirs have agreed to stand down and go silent, so that we might all sing from the same song book rather than spread the devil’s virus, but why are all other congregants free to gather up close and in person?

There has been enormous hand-wringing about restrictive rules for restaurants, but the clasping of hands in public prayer stirs little discussion in Canada. Across the U.S., religious groups have pushed back — litigating and congregating in large numbers against governing authorities that try to restrain or constrain the supposedly inalienable rights of evangelical Christians or ultra-Orthodox Jews — but as the COVID-19 caseload increases, the time for long-distance praying is surely drawing closer.

That’s the discussion that people of faith, and politicians of faith, must have. There is no better time than now, after the public folly of Oosterhoff’s Facebook photo-op.

We now know that masks save lives — not just for the wearer but for others in the vicinity. But we also know — now more than ever — that keeping our distance keeps us that much safer.

In mid-pandemic, no life is worth risking on a wing or a prayer.

Martin Regg Cohn is a Toronto-based columnist covering Ontario politics for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

LIVE VIDEO: Ontario Premier Doug Ford provides daily update on COVID-19 December 1

Watch Premier Doug Ford’s daily COVID-19 update now.

At a news conference in Brampton, Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott, Ontario’s solicitor general Sylvia Jones and retired general Rick Hillier, chair of the province’s new COVID-19 vaccine distribution task force make an announcement and provide an update on the Ontario government’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Ontario Premier Doug Ford has asked for more clarity on the federal government’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout, including the date vaccines are expected to arrive in Ontario.

NATIONAL UPDATE: On Parliament Hill, Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer, and Dr. Howard Njoo, the deputy chief public health officer, join ministers Dominic LeBlanc (intergovernmental affairs), Patty Hajdu (health) and Anita Anand (public services and procurement) for an update on the federal response to COVID-19.

‘Please, just make decisions based on the evidence’: Halton mayors lobby against expanding Stage 2 restrictions as COVID-19 hits new highs in Ontario

As Ontario hit a grim new milestone , leaders in some of the province’s harder-hit areas urged the provincial government not to impose more restrictions on regions that haven’t already been rolled back to Stage 2.

The province reported 978 new cases in its morning update, a single-day record that has also pushed Ontario’s rolling seven-day average to a pandemic-high 803 cases daily. Locally, the province reported 348 new cases in Toronto, 170 in Peel, 141 in York Region, 89 in Ottawa and 51 in Durham.

Meanwhile, open letters from politicians in Halton Region — one to and one to Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. David Williams — said the province shouldn’t impose new restrictions there. Earlier this month, the province imposed a return to a “modified Stage 2” in Toronto, Ottawa, Peel Region and York Region, all of which continue to see higher rates of infection than in Halton.

Halton’s showed an increase of 35 cases.

“A blanket approach that unfairly punishes small businesses with no explanation will hurt our local economy and impact buy-in from our residents,” said the letter to Ford, signed by mayors of four cities and towns in Halton, as well as regional chair Gary Carr.

The letter to Williams, meanwhile, demanded the release of being used when reinstating or lifting COVID-related restrictions.

“During the height of COVID-19, the majority of Ontarians accepted unprecedented restrictions in order to stop the spread and flatten the curve. Now, nearly seven months later the public is demanding more than just the blanket statement of ‘on the advice of medical experts,’ ” said the letter, signed by Carr, two mayors and a pair of Progressive Conservative MPPs.

Burlington mayor Marianne Meed Ward, who signed both letters, said the message to provincial officials was simple.

“Please, just make decisions based on the evidence,” Ward said in an interview.

Ward said she was hopeful the province wouldn’t roll Halton back to the modified Stage 2. The letter to Williams added that the region has taken a number of steps after York was rolled back to Stage 2 a week ago, including a ban on using municipal facilities for team sports and fitness classes.

“There is no evidence to suggest that moving Halton to a modified Phase 2 will have any meaningful impact on reducing case counts. One thing that is certain, is that many people and businesses cannot financially withstand another shutdown,” the letter added.

The mayor of Oshawa also urged the province not to clamp down in Durham Region, saying the economic toll would be disastrous, and unnecessary.

“I understand that everyone’s health and well-being has to be the top concern. But I just don’t think a return to Stage 2 is justified, based on the numbers,” Mayor Dan Carter said in an interview. “It would be devastating for the economy, especially in the restaurant industry.”

As of Saturday evening, Durham and Halton have the sixth- and seventh-highest rate of new cases per capita in the province, at 35 and 34 cases per 100,000 people per week, respectively.

In an email, Ford spokesperson Ivana Yelich defended the provincial government’s pandemic performance.

“While the numbers in Halton and other parts of the province are concerning, we are working very hard to control the spread of the virus as much as possible,” said Yelich, who also gave some broad details of which criteria are used in assessing regional COVID risk.

“These include COVID-19 spread and containment, public health capacity to conduct rapid case and contact management, the type and setting of outbreaks, incidence tracking, increases in hospitalization and ICU admission and testing capacity,” Yelich said. “As we have done in the past, we will continue to provide a clear account of the data and evidence if and when a region needs to be moved into modified Stage 2.”

Toronto General Hospital infectious disease specialist Dr. Isaac Bogoch suggested the province should wait another week before imposing restrictions on new areas, to see if the return to Stage 2 is working elsewhere.

“Next week will be crucial, because that’s when we’ll start to really see what kind of impact the restrictions brought in for Toronto and Peel will have. Right now, it’s still a bit too early to tell,” Bogoch said.

Jean-Paul Soucy, a University of Toronto PhD student in epidemiology and co-founder of the COVID-19 Canada Open Data Working Group, disagreed, saying the province should act sooner rather than later in regions like Halton and Durham.

“The earlier you act, the more your return is compounded,” he said.

Soucy also noted that Ontario’s numbers would likely have been higher sooner if the province hadn’t changed the testing system to be appointment-only earlier this month. Since then, the province has reported fewer completed tests daily on average.

“The fact that we’re seeing higher numbers like this despite the changes in testing is concerning,” Soucy said.

Josh Rubin is a Toronto-based business reporter. Follow him on Twitter:

‘It’s been pretty brutal’: First month back at school tough on mental health, students say

Before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, Andrew Fuller was thriving at school.

The third-year York University student, who had been dealing with depression, said for the first time in years, he felt like he really had control over his studies.

“I went through the whole school year for the first time totally going to all my classes and staying motivated the whole year,” he said.

But once schools turned to online models of learning in March, his progress came to a halt. Fuller said he found himself unmotivated, falling into old patterns due to the lack of routine.

This semester has been even more challenging.

“It’s been pretty brutal, honestly. The school online component has been strange; there’s not much consistency … some classes are completely synchronous and live, and some of them are completely asynchronous,” he said. “It’s been very difficult just because I’m someone that needs structure.”

In a about mental health amid the pandemic, Meagan MacKenzie, an assistant professor of psychology at McMaster University, cited a routine schedule as one potential mitigating strategy for those dealing with depression, adding that “it takes away that feeling of uncertainty that we might have in this pandemic situation.”

Fuller said even small activities scheduled into his week, like being able to work out of a coffee shop or having in-person discussions in a university tutorial, have been helpful in the past.

“Not being able to do that now is also kind of obstructing me,” he added. “It’s not easy for me to work at home. I don’t find that I can focus very well.”

On Oct. 6, the Ontario government announced an investment of $19.25 million into mental health initiatives for post-secondary students, which includes a mental health helpline, an online application, a knowledge exchange hub and grants for mental health workers and services.

“Our government is ensuring post-secondary students have the right mental health services and supports that they need during these unprecedented times,” Health Minister Christine Elliott said in a news release. “Targeted investments like this one, is another example of how we continue to build a comprehensive and connected mental health and addictions system, so every Ontarian feels supported so they can maintain their mental wellness.”

Fuller, who has been advocating for more accessible mental health services for students, said this is a good step.

andrewfullerAndrew Fuller is in his third year at York University. – Andrew Fuller photo

For many students navigating high school this year, their new COVID-19 schedule has also been difficult to manage.

Sevin Davies, a Grade 10 student from Beamsville, said the new quadmester model adopted by school boards across the province has added an extra element of stress to the year, as he and his peers are now learning the same subject for six hours each day and will finish the credit for that course within only a few weeks. 

“It can get frustrating and tough sometimes,” he said.

Davies, along with two of his Grade 10 peers, Duncan McDonald and Adia Binfield, are currently raising funds for children’s mental health, as part of , which supports local mental health foundation, . The group is  this year.

“It’s very real that kids suffer from mental health too, so if they see someone like them that’s speaking out about it, they’re more likely to go and try to find help,” Binfield said.

McDonald added that another aspect of back-to-school that has been challenging for him and his peers is the lack of social time with friends.

“Lunch times are staggered and you really don’t see any of your friends all day because you’re six feet apart from anyone in the school,” he said. “It’s very difficult in a social environment like a school, to have no social contact. And just have six hours of school with no friends, really.”

Davies said the campaign is especially timely as kids are back in school and dealing with a lot of mental stressors. 

“Mental illnesses have been completely through the roof and fundraising has been really hard, but the mental illness doesn’t stop. People still need help,” Davies said. “So we need to find a way to raise money.”

New partnership allows Midland’s Georgian Bay General Hospital to offer cardiac care

Residents in Midland, Penetanguishene, Tiny and Tay are now able to have cardiac diagnostic procedures completed at their community hospital.

Midland’s Georgian Bay General Hospital (GBGH) has partnered with Barrie’s Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre (RVH) to begin offering echocardiography services. 

“In the first year of the partnership, we anticipate nearly 1,100 patients will be able to receive echocardiograms at GBGH, reducing their need to travel out of our area for this service,” said Gail Hunt, president and chief executive officer of GBGH. 

An echocardiogram is an ultrasound of the heart which produces two- and three-dimensional images of the heart structure and function. This low-risk imaging procedure can assist in the diagnosis of heart murmurs, valve function, cardiac masses, hypertension and heart disease. 

“We are very pleased to partner with RVH on this initiative, based on their depth of experience in cardiac care and for the benefit of providing this important service to our community. Offering echocardiograms at GBGH directly aligns with our strategic priority to grow our programming to align with community needs,” Hunt said.

The partnership, which launched on Oct. 5, will see an RVH cardiac sonographer conduct echocardiograms in GBGH’s diagnostic imaging department. The service will be available to GBGH inpatients and patients in the community who are referred by a physician. It will be provided at GBGH on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday each week.

“As the regional health centre, RVH is committed to providing exceptional care closer to home through important partnerships like this one with GBGH,” said Janice Skot, president and chief executive officer at RVH. “By leveraging the expertise of RVH’s regional heart program, patients can have great confidence in the skill and accuracy of the diagnostic study, without having to travel for care.”

GBGH and RVH have launched partnerships over the past three years to improve the quality of health care and increase the variety of services GBGH can offer to patients.