Month: July 2021

‘WARNING’: Meat product sold at Sobeys and FreshCo and other grocery stores recalled over Listeria fears

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has ordered a product recall due to possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

The CFIA said in its “food that Levitts Foods (Canada) Inc. is recalling Compliments brand Smoked Beef Pastrami, sold widely in Sobeys and FreshCo grocery stores across Ontario, according to the

“This recall was triggered by Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) test results. The CFIA is conducting a food safety investigation, which may lead to the recall of other products. If other high-risk products are recalled, the CFIA will notify the public through updated Food Recall Warnings,” the Agency said.

The Agency is telling shoppers to check and see if they have bought the recalled product or if it’s in their home.

“Recalled products should be thrown out or returned to the store where they were purchased,” the Agency said.

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

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

The CFIA is verifying that the industry is removing the recalled product from the marketplace and said there have been no reported illnesses associated with the consumption of this product.

Here are photos of the recalled product:

Ontario court denies appeal by killer of Barrie’s Alexandra Flanagan

The man convicted of killing Barrie’s Alexandra Flanagan won’t be getting out of jail anytime soon.

Earlier this summer, Andrew Keene appealed both his conviction and his sentence, based on the fact a police sting known as a Mr. Big operation was used to find him guilty.

But in Ontario Court of Appeal , released Oct. 8, he concludes the trial judge made the right call in sentencing Keene to life in prison with no eligibility of parole for 17 years.

Keene was sentenced July 2, 2015, after confessing to the murder and dismemberment of Flanagan, who had gone missing in July 2007.

Keene’s lawyer said the the only reason Keene confessed to the crime is because he believed he was a liability for the Mr. Big criminal organization.

Strathy said the question is “whether the police induced a confession from him by using coercion, threats of coercion, or conduct approximating coercion to overcome his will,” he wrote in his report.

He noted there was no physical violence or threat of physical violence against Keene.

“Ultimately, (Keene) was carrying a terrible burden and felt the police closing in on him. He willingly and gratefully accepted Mr. Big’s offer of assistance, not because he was pressured or coerced into doing so, or because he thought he would be ‘put in a hole’ if he did not.”

Strathy dismissed the conviction appeal based on that information.

As for the parole ineligibility period, Strathy said he should only “interfere with a sentence if it is demonstrably unfit, or if it reflects an error in principle.”

The length of a sentence is to denounce unlawful conduct and deter others from similar conduct, he wrote.

“The dismemberment of Ms. Flanagan’s body and the disposal of her remains about Barrie, coupled with the victim impact statements from her family (parents, sisters and aunt), speak to the horrific nature of the appellant’s crimes,” Strathy wrote. “The circumstances of Ms. Flanagan’s murder and the events after it warrant a period of parole ineligibility at the upper end of the range.”

Correction — Oct. 13, 2020: This article has been edited from a previous version that misstated Justice Strathy’s name.

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:

LIVE VIDEO: Ontario Premier Doug Ford provides daily update on COVID-19 October 26

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

In a news conference at Queen’s Park, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and provincial cabinet ministers Christine Elliott (health) and Rod Phillips (finance) provide an update on their government’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 (coronavirus disease) pandemic.


Standard & Poor’s maintains City of Barrie’s ‘AA’ credit rating

The City of Barrie has maintained its ‘AA’ credit rating for another year and the outlook is stable, according to the latest report from Standard & Poor’s (S&P). This report is issued annually from S&P, a financial services company that offers services including credit ratings, data analysis, and equity research to private and public sectors worldwide.

“A better credit rating saves our taxpayers real dollars, as it reduces the interest costs on borrowing. In this way, good financial management helps us keep taxes down. The City has made necessary adjustments during COVID-19 to cut spending to compensate for reduced revenue, while still maintaining essential services to our residents,” says Mayor Jeff Lehman.

The report attributes Barrie’s ‘AA’ rating to the City’s cost-containment efforts, a diverse and healthy economy, growing workforce, and strong operating balance. Although there may be some budgetary stresses due to the ongoing pandemic, S&P predicts a stable outlook for the City over the next two years.

“Our strong financial management practices have maintained our rating,” says Craig Millar, Director of Finance. “The steps staff have taken to minimize economic impacts over the last six months have helped protect the City’s financial future.”

S&P Report Highlights:

• “Although COVID-19 will be a temporary shock to the City of Barrie, the city will proceed with its healthy growth rates and plans to diversify its economy once the effects of the pandemic subside.”

• “Financial management will continue to demonstrate prudence, allowing the city to generate healthy operating surpluses and keep its debt burden manageable, despite the pandemic-related operating pressures.”

To read the full report, visit

Midland council approves 1.2 per cent pay increase for non-unionized employees

The decision of whether or not to approve a scheduled pay increase for non-unionized employees was highly contested during a Town of Midland council meeting on Oct. 21.

Council was presented with a staff report requesting approval to process a 1.25 per cent cost-of-living adjustment for non-unionized management, retroactive to Jan. 1, 2020.

“I think it would be very irresponsible for us to choose to give people pay increases when we know as a community we are struggling,” said Coun. Carole McGinn. “I don’t believe this is a burden we should be putting on our taxpayers.”

Laura Yorkin, director of human resources for the Town of Midland, noted the town has already given pay increases to all unionized employees this year. Employees represented by OPSEU and IBEW received one per cent cost-of-living adjustment increases, while those working for the fire department received 2.75 per cent pay bumps.

Although pay increases for all employees were included in the 2020 budget approved by council in December, some councillors felt the change in the town’s financial situation warranted an about-face.

“To me this is just the wrong time to approve this,” said Coun. Bill Gordon. “Not getting a cost-of-living increase this late in the year is not going to change anybody’s financial status. They haven’t had the money all year.”

Coun. Cody Oschefski disagreed, suggesting all employees should be treated fairly.

“We have approved raises for our union employees and other employees,” said Oschefski. “Creating division within your employees is never good for morale.”

David Denault, chief administrative officer for the town of Midland, vouched for town employees. He said he looks at the town staff as one big team and wants them to all be treated fairly. 

Denault added the increase was needed in order to keep Midland competitive. 

“We are part of a larger community when we are competing for talent,” said Denault. “When employees look at that community, they will judge us by how we act and how we treat our employees.”

In the end, council voted 5-3 in favour of the scheduled pay bump. 

The increase will cost the town approximately $47,000.

Donald Trump lost, but Trumpism is still thriving. Could it take hold in Canada, too?

Canadians who were shocked by the election of Donald Trump in 2016 have been comforting themselves since then with two thoughts: it can’t happen again and it can’t happen here.

It didn’t happen again; not quite. But the fact that Trump gained more votes in 2020 than he did four years ago — roughly seven million more, so far — should serve as bracing evidence that Trumpism is more than a blip on the political landscape.

So by the same token, it’s probably unwise to continue assuming that Trump’s brand of politics can be somehow contained south of the Canada-U.S. border, any more than a virus can. While Canadians of a progressive bent may be still basking in relief over Joe Biden’s victory, complacency doesn’t seem like the best idea over the long haul.

The win, in short, was too close a call.

When you think about it, Canadian Liberals in particular have experienced two jolts to their comfortable assumptions in the past couple of weeks.

Two by-elections in Toronto, in some of the safest Liberal ridings in Canada, saw erosions in support for Justin Trudeau’s Liberals. These were the first electoral verdicts on the prime minister since the pandemic hit Canada, and the first chance for voters to weigh in on all of Trudeau’s very deliberate efforts to handle the crisis in a way opposite to Trump.

Trudeau won those by-elections, but not resoundingly. Nor was Trump resoundingly defeated last week, even if Canadians — like many pollsters north and south of the border — were expecting a slam dunk.

Frank Graves, the EKOS pollster who has been doing an intense study of populism and its potential to surface in Canada, was not feeling complacent at all as the results rolled in from the Nov. 3 vote. on the eve of the vote last week, and the conclusion of that article was a warning and a prediction wrapped up in four words: “Trump is still competitive.”

Quietly, methodically, Graves has been analyzing the component pieces of Trump’s appeal and what feeds the political culture of grievance that the president championed. Much of Graves’ in a paper for the University of Calgary’s public-policy school — a paper that should be required reading for any Canadians of the “it can’t happen here” way of thinking.

Graves has coined the phrase “ordered populism” to describe the Trump phenomenon and the paper’s summary describes it this way:

“Ordered populism rests on the belief in a corrupt elite, and the idea that power needs to be wrested from this elite and returned to the people. Oriented toward authoritarianism, ordered populism emphasizes obedience, hostility toward outgroups, a desire to turn back the clock to a time of greater order in society, and a search for a strongman type to lead the return to a better time.”

Does that type of politics exist in Canada? It sure does, Graves says, and it’s been on the rise for the past few years. His research says that view is shared by as much as a third of the population and its ascent is accompanied by increases in polarization, inequality and a decline in the middle class.

This is all a bucket of cold water on the wave of relief in Canada at Trump’s defeat, but Graves is blunt. “If you think anything has been solved in the United States with this election, it’s not,” he says. “Our response is typically in Canada to either sneer at this or deny that it’s happening, and that’s really not particularly helpful.”

Some of that denial is rooted in the fact that we really don’t have a northern version of Trump in Canada, though that label has been tried out on everyone from Ontario Premier Doug Ford to Alberta Premier Jason Kenney to Maxime Bernier, tleader of the new People’s Party — who hasn’t so far managed to win a seat for himself or his party. Nor has Canada polarized, at least not yet, around the pandemic, as the U.S. did.

Just because we don’t have a Trump here, though, doesn’t mean that we’re immune to the political forces he whipped up in the U.S.: whether that’s opposition to global trade and immigration, or grudge-fuelled resentment of institutions, big business, elites and experts. Any glance at the Canadian political conversation on Twitter demonstrates daily that this anger simmers on social media.

Allan Rock, former senior minister in Jean Chretien’s government who also served as Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations, has been urging that this country keep up its guard against the spread of Trumpism. He spoke about some of those concerns on CBC Radio’s The Current last week, and afterward obliged me with some further thoughts.

Rock says he’s been troubled for a while about what dark forces Trump seems to have unleashed, not just in the U.S., but in Canada too.

“I think the most damaging aspect of his awful tenure has been the voice he has given to white supremacy and racism generally,” Rock said.

He points to what , up 47 after Trump came to power. “Although the numbers went down in 2018, they remain higher than before Trump took office (they were on a downward trend 2014-16,)” Rock notes.

“Beyond those stats, one can cite the general coarsening of the language used in public debate, the frightening aggressiveness on social media, and the steep and activity of extreme right-wing groups in Canada — all evidence of lowered civility, more confrontational behaviour and the increasing boldness of the hatemongers.”

It’s not just words, though.

Rock didn’t mention it explicitly, but many Liberals are disturbed by how blithely people seem to have skipped right past a chilling incident last summer, when a Canadian Forces reserve member, Corey Hurren, crashed through the gates of Rideau Hall with a truck full of weapons, headed for Trudeau’s residence. As the Star has reported, Hurren has a well-documented connection to far-right conspiracy networks and the alternative-news universe. The “sausage-maker from Manitoba,” as Hurren has been described, was actually due in court last Friday, but the case was held over for another month, awaiting a possible plea.

The day before this incident, a “Freedom Rally” took place in Ottawa, complete with pandemic deniers, anti-mask and gun advocates, and yes, placards in support of Trump. It was by no means a large civil disturbance — the national capital kind of rolls with protests of all kinds — but it was enough of an event to show that Trump’s brand of grievance politics exists in Canada, too. Bernier made an appearance at the rally, but it would be a stretch to call him the leader of it.

Canada’s complacency about Trump-style politics is also fed by the absence here of two other major ingredients of its power in the U.S.: binary choices and Fox News (a mass-market media amplifier for Trump and his base).

In Canada, voters have more than two, either/or options at the ballot box and more citizens float between political parties, making it more difficult to cast the choice on election day as one between good and evil. There’s no equivalent of Fox News and viewership for it here is minuscule, say sources familiar with the Canadian ratings. An attempt at setting up a Fox News North, Sun TV, collapsed several years ago because it wasn’t profitable.

All Canadians who were riveted to the extra-long vote count in the U.S. — the ones who were hoping for Trump’s defeat — have no doubt floated between optimism and pessimism over the past week: hope for the way it turned out and despair that it was that close. It’s been said before; the hardest place to be in politics in these polarized times is right in the middle.

The centre is an even more uncomfortable place, too, after the past week in U.S. politics, which proved that it’s no longer possible — or wise — to see Trump as a passing or containable force.

Susan Delacourt is an Ottawa-based columnist covering national politics for the Star. Reach her via email: sdelacourt@thestar.ca or follow her on Twitter: @susandelacourt

Susan Delacourt is an Ottawa-based columnist covering national politics for the Star. Reach her via email: or follow her on Twitter: @susandelacourt

‘FOOD RECALL WARNING’: Various eggs sold in Ontario stores recalled over possible Salmonella contamination

Various cartons and packages of eggs sold in Ontario have been recalled over Salmonella fears.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said that Les Œufs Richard Eggs Inc., a Quebec-based company, is recalling eggs from the marketplace due to possible Salmonella contamination. “Consumers should not consume and distributors, retailers and food service establishments such as hotels, restaurants, cafeterias, hospitals, and nursing homes should not serve, sell, or use the recalled products,” according to the

Only eggs from Les Œufs Richard Eggs Inc. with best before dates indicated in the table where the lot code contains “Q29” or where there is no lot code on the package are implicated by the recall, the Agency said, adding the eggs were sold at the retail level in Ontario and Quebec, but didn’t specify where exactly.

This recall was triggered by test results. The CFIA is conducting a food safety investigation, which may lead to the recall of other products, the Agency said.

If you think you became sick from consuming a recalled product, call your doctor, the Agency warns.

“Check to see if you have the recalled products in your home or establishment. Recalled products should be thrown out or returned to the location where they were purchased,” the warning notes.

Food contaminated with Salmonella may not look or smell spoiled but can still make you sick, the CFIA and Health Canada said.

Young children, pregnant women, the elderly and people with weakened immune systems may contract serious and sometimes deadly infections. Healthy people may experience short-term symptoms such as fever, headache, vomiting, nausea, abdominal cramps and diarrhea. Long-term complications may include severe arthritis, the CFIA added.

Richards Eggs said the recall only applies to a limited number of products over a short period.

“What’s important to mention is that the presence of Salmonella was detected in an environmental farm test. No tests show contamination at the egg and grading station level. In addition, no cases of intoxication have been reported to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA),” the company said in a Facebook posting dated Nov. 21. “The animals in the lot in question have already been put down and the disinfection of the building is underway for a preventive purpose and thus manage the risk at its lowest level.”

Here’s what some of the cartons and products look like:

SIU determines OPP officer acted appropriately to subdue New Tecumseth woman who injured herself with blade

An OPP officer who used a stun gun to subdue a New Tecumseth woman who injured herself with a blade has been cleared of any wrongdoing by the Special Investigations Unit (SIU).

The incident happened Oct. 6 in Innisfil on Highway 89, near the northbound on-ramp to Highway 400.

The SIU said the 27-year-old woman was heading from Mississauga to Manitoba, where she intended to die by suicide, but had stopped her vehicle at the on ramp and exited the vehicle.

The police officer who attended the scene had a brief interaction with the woman at a distance, and at some point she used a box cutter to slash one of her wrists.

The officer used the stun gun to immobilize the woman and place her into custody, so she could be brought to hospital for treatment.

SIU Director Joseph Martino issued the following statement.

“Based on the SIU’s preliminary inquiries, it is apparent that the woman is alone to blame for her injuries,” he said. “As there is no question on the aforementioned-record of any potential criminal liability on the part of the officer in connection with the woman’s injuries, the investigation is hereby discontinued and the file is closed.”

Explore downtown Barrie’s new look, Dunlop Street makeover now complete

The Dunlop Street construction project officially comes to an end tomorrow with the final intersections under construction reopening. The Five Points and Toronto St. intersections will be fully open by 12 p.m. on Wednesday, December 9. The project means a new and improved look on 1.5 km of Dunlop Street, from west of Poyntz Street to Toronto Street.

The We Dig Downtown project, which began in August 2019, was a major undertaking that replaced and repaired infrastructure underground, while giving downtown’s main street a complete makeover. Underground improvements include a partial new storm sewer and catch basins, new watermain elements, flushing/cleaning of sanitary sewers, as well as tree pits with soils cells.

The street now has wider and more accessible sidewalks, and more permanent patio options for downtown restaurants and stores. Many elements were replaced including new streetlights, planters, trees, benches, bike racks, pay and display parking machines and waste/recycling bins, adding to the improved aesthetic that now defines Dunlop Street.

The $15.7M project was completed by local companies, with the design by Tatham Engineering and construction by Arnott Construction.

There will be some final clean-up of remaining work to be done in spring 2021, but this should not cause any major disruptions or require any full road closures.

Visit to learn more about this project.