Month: July 2021

‘Incomprehensible behaviour’: John Tory reacts after Scarborough party leads to 14 people fined $880 each

Partygoers in Scarborough on Tuesday night demonstrated “inconsiderate” and “incomprehensible behaviour,” Mayor John Tory said Wednesday.

Toronto police said 14 people in Scarborough were each fined $880 Tuesday after officers were called for a “noisy party” in the Kingston Road and St. Clair Avenue East area.

Police said about 50 people were at the party.

“We’re past the education time, we’re past the warning time, we’re onto the enforcement time,” said Tory at a press conference. “I hope (police) will see fit to do whatever they think is appropriate in terms of enforcing the law as it exists. And it exists for good public health reason.”

Officers issued 14 provincial offence notices under the Reopening Ontario Act for failure to comply with an order.

Police said during their investigation, a man was arrested on an outstanding warrant and transported to Halton police.

Toronto police Chief James Ramer said: “We now consider it a public safety issue. We’re working very closely with the city to attend complaints, and where appropriate, charges will be laid.”

The city’s medical officer of health, Dr. Eileen de Villa, called on Toronto residents to abide by “self-protection measures,” in response to the party.

“We need to commit to engaging in the appropriate behaviours,” said de Villa. “The behaviours that will protect ourselves and protect our community and get us to a point where we are able to enjoy our city, get our city back and get beyond .”

Const. Randall Arsenault said the incident showed “blatant disregard of rules meant to protect us all.”

The fine comes after Tory said the city will be getting tougher in regards to the of by laws surrounding new gathering limits across the GTA.

Homeowners and event organizers in Ontario can be fined up to $10,000 for an event that exceeds the maximum number of people set out in the , with a $750 fine for attendees.

Matthew Pegg, chief of Toronto Fire Services, said the command centre received over 20 complaints in relation to gatherings that occurred this past weekend.

The Reopening Ontario Act extended specific emergency orders in the province. The provincial government announced Sept. 17 that there would be new gathering limits in Toronto to 10 people indoors and 25 outdoors in a bid to curb the increasing spread of COVID-19.

With files from Manuela Vega and David Rider

Libaan Osman is a breaking news reporter, working out of the Star’s radio room in Toronto. Reach him via email:

UPlift Black delivers Youth Care Packages, provides new opportunities for Simcoe Muskoka to show UP

Following months of hard work and dedication from volunteers, local businesses and community support, UPlift Black has officially wrapped up its first project UPlift Black – Youth Care Packages which saw the delivery of 239 care packages to Black youth throughout the Simcoe Muskoka region.

The project could not have been successful without the commitment and hard work from UPlift Black’s dedicated volunteers and community members who have continued to show UP, support and donate to the cause, as well as the support from its community partners including Making Change SC, Shak’s World.

UPlift Black would like to thank those who provided their business as a designated drop off location for the UPlift Black – Youth Care Package Project, including: Addiction Services for York Region, Barrie Chamber of Commerce, Beach Barbers, Big Momma’s Soul Food, Dotsi Eats, Drors, JJ’s Caribbean Cuisine, Key Mortgage Partners, Sherine Dezy Norwex Independent Consultant Office, Simmering Kettle, Studio Eleven, and Take My Hand Wellness.

“My son and I were both overwhelmed with the generosity of UPlift Black and the donors and sponsors for the items that were in the care package,” says Sandra, a mother, whose son received a care package. “The efforts of all involved made my son, and I’m sure all recipients of the care packages, feel so special and worthy.”

UPlift Black continues to support families that receive care packages and ensure they have the technology needs they may have to help youth, and their caretakers, adjust to their new environments as they head into a school year under COVID-19 restrictions.

“Access to technology is becoming a necessity for both children and adults, as we head into a ‘new normal’ world,” says Shelly Skinner, President of UPlift Black. “There are still cost and access barriers to technology that low-income families face to this day, and ensuring we can support them through this transition period is crucial to their continued success.”

Following a busy summer, the team at UPlift Black has its sight set on a series of new projects to help inform and educate the Simcoe Muskoka community, including:

Launching an Adult Book Club and Youth Book Club to engage with community members of all ages in both insightful and informative discussions on inclusivity, gender, anti-racism and Black stories. To learn more and sign up, visit /

Launching the UPlift Black Voices Newsletter which highlights and promotes Black voices, artists and businesses. To read the latest volume, visit

Launching UPlift Black The Web Series, thanks to the generous donation and partnership from Multi Tech Audio Visual Inc. (MTAV). The series shares stories and work of members from the Black community living in the Simcoe Muskoka region, and Canada. To watch the web series, visit

To keep engaged and up-to-date with current and upcoming projects at UPlift Black, sign up for news updates by visiting the homepage of the website at .

Share. Support. Show UP.

Orillia’s COVID-19 assessment centre on the move

Soldiers’ Memorial Hospital and the city have partnered to relocate Orillia’s COVID-19 assessment centre to Rotary Place in an effort to better serve those seeking tests.

Hospital president and CEO Carmine Stumpo said the move addresses two major challenges.

“It enables us to provide service indoors during the colder winter months ahead, and it offers adequate parking that is needed under the new ‘appointments only-based’ model mandated by the province late last week,” Stumpo said.

The assessment centre previously operated on a walk-in basis, accommodating requests as patients drove up to the centre that was located on the hospital property.   

The move to Rotary Place takes effect Oct. 6 and will alleviate the lengthy vehicle lineups that snaked through hospital neighbourhoods as people waited hours for a test.   

Hospital staff  will continue to run the centre and maintain the same operating hours, from 11 a.m. until 6:30 p.m. Monday to Friday, and from 11 a.m. until 2:30 pm on weekends and holidays.  

“We’re very grateful to the city and emergency management leaders for their collaboration in making this space available on short notice,” said Stumpo.  

The sports facility was chosen for its ample parking, dedicated entry and exit, a large ice surface for testing, and separation of the assessment centre from the rest of the building to allow for regularly scheduled recreation programming to continue.

(The health unit approved the use of Rotary Place as an assessment centre in conjunction with regular programming.)

Mayor Steve Clarke said the municipality was pleased to support the hospital and facilitate the move.

“Both of our teams have been working diligently in short order to make the move possible so that the assessment centre can continue to meet the needs of our community,” Clarke added.

Appointments can be booked online or by phone.

To book online, go to or

The telephone booking line is in the process of being established and the number will be shared as soon as it is available.

Visitors to the assessment centre are asked not to enter Rotary Place at the main entrance. but to follow the signs and use the dedicated entrance at the side of the building.



Toronto’s plan for shelters for the first winter of COVID-19 includes more beds, warming centres — and plastic barriers

Toronto unveiled its shelter plan Tuesday for the first winter of COVID-19, replacing the former Out of the Cold program with hotel beds, introducing new warming centres and putting plastic barriers in double occupancy hotel rooms and at a respite site on the CNE grounds.

In all, the plan calls for 560 new spots: 150 new hotel program beds; 100 beds at two modular sites scheduled to open in November and December; 120 units for women on Church Street, scheduled to open by early December; and 100 beds in the CNE respite site.

There will also be 90 hotel beds specifically in lieu of Out of the Cold, the program that provided overnight shelter in a variety of locations in previous winters. That program has been deemed unfeasible due COVID-19 guidelines.

The plan increases the number of spaces for available to Toronto’s homeless through the winter for the fifth year in a row, the city said.

Some outreach workers expressed concern that the plan leaves the city with fewer shelter beds this winter compared to last, pointing to the loss of roughly 1,000 beds from sites being forced to reduce their capacity to adhere to pandemic distancing rules.

Mary-Anne Bédard, general manager of Toronto’s Shelter, Support and Housing Administration, said that the loss was mostly in temporary refugee beds, which haven’t been in as high demand with current border restrictions.

The city will have more beds available this winter for single individuals than it had in the middle of last year’s cold season, she said, “where the majority of the pressure is in our system.”

Bédard said that will be the case even taking into account the increase in beds mid-way through last winter from 485 new spots to more than 600.

Greg Cook, an outreach worker with Toronto’s Sanctuary Ministries, still believes the increase won’t be “nearly enough” to handle the pressures this winter — especially if the opening of the modular construction sites are delayed.

One piece of welcome news to homelessness advocates was the increase to four warming centres this winter instead of one. Street nurse Cathy Crowe said it was “badly needed,” and expressed hope that they would provide hot meals rather than options like coffee and granola bars. “The people coming in here are going to be the most vulnerable,” she said.

Bédard said meals would be provided in shelter, respite and hotel sites, and that the warming centres would provide people with warm beverages and snacks.

Having more warming centres was partly triggered by the loss of Out of the Cold sites that were more spread out across the city, Bédard said. People living in encampments outside the downtown core are thought more likely to come inside on the worst winter nights if they don’t have to travel to the central part of the city to access a warming site.

Two of the warming sites have yet to be finalized, but Bédard said the city was looking at spaces in North York and Scarborough. The other two will be downtown.

Several outreach workers believe Tuesday’s plan doesn’t include adequate protections for encampment residents.

“They need to help fortify the encampments, help with fire safety plans, help with getting food and warmth and supplies,” said Kimberly Curry, executive director of the charity Seeds of Hope. “I know that’s a tricky thing for them because they’re supporting something they already deemed unsafe, but people have to survive.”

Throughout the pandemic, the city has said that indoor spaces are safer than the encampments that have increasingly sprung up in public parks and other areas — an assertion being .

Tuesday’s plan says that street outreach staff will hand out blankets and sleeping bags to people staying outside, but only during extreme cold weather alerts.

Providing supports exclusively in the worst weather puts pressure on non-profits and groups like the Encampment Support Network, Crowe said.

Crowe also raised concerns with the use of the plastic barriers between beds, saying that they could create a false sense of security.

She also worries about the 100-person occupancy of the planned respite at the Better Living Centre on the CNE grounds, and said she doesn’t believe double occupancy should happen in the hotel programs except for couples.

Sanctuary’s Cook agreed: “If they’re going to open up anything new, it needs to be one person per hotel room or permanent housing.”

Bédard said some encampment residents who either shared tents or had been living close to one another had specifically asked whether they could move into hotel rooms together.

“We want to really be able to acknowledge the importance of social connection during a time when it’s very stressful and there’s a lot of extra anxiety. People move into rooms and feel further isolated from their family of choice … that can have consequences for mental health,” Bédard said.

Concerns had also been raised about individuals using drugs alone, she said — in the shelter hotels especially — with no one around to intervene if they overdosed.

As , the city believes that 16 deaths connected to the shelter system between January and August were overdoses — including nine that took place in July alone.

Bedard said the plastic barriers are designed to add an extra layer of protection in dual occupancy hotels and the CNE respite. While people will be asked to wear masks inside facilities, there will be long periods when they’d be unmasked while sleeping or resting.

As of Monday afternoon, the city was reporting two shelters with active COVID-19 cases — one case at Strachan House and six at the Kennedy House Youth Shelter. Bédard acknowledged that with cases on the rise in Toronto they may see more throughout the winter.

“When there is broad community spread, we are likely to see it in all areas of our community, and that includes our homeless population,” she said.

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:

Public Health Agency releases ‘final update’ into onion Salmonella outbreak in Canada that has left hundreds sick and dozens hospitalized

The Public Health Agency has released what it’s calling it’s “final update” into a salmonella outbreak in Canada caused by onions.

The outbreak, the Agency says, “appears to be over” and the “outbreak investigation has been closed.” Onions imported from the United States are no longer under investigation since salmonella illness linked to this outbreak have “significantly decreased” over the last three weeks.

Since mid-summer, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) collaborated with federal and provincial public health partners, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to investigate an outbreak of salmonella infections that occurred in seven provinces, including Ontario.

“Given that Salmonella illness reporting linked to this outbreak has significantly decreased over the last three weeks, the outbreak appears to be over and the investigation has been closed,” the Agency said in a statement/

The investigation’s findings identified “exposure” to red onions imported from the USA as a likely source of the outbreak,

In total, there were linked to this outbreak in the following provinces: British Columbia (121), Alberta (293), Saskatchewan (35), Manitoba (26), Ontario (14), Quebec (25) and Prince Edward Island (1).

Individuals became sick between mid-June and late-August 2020.

Seventy-nine individuals were hospitalized, the Agency said, and three people died, but salmonella did not contribute to the cause of these deaths.

Individuals who became ill were between 1 and 100 years of age. The majority of cases (54 per cent) were female.

“Individuals who were ill reported eating red onions at home, in menu items ordered at restaurants and in residential care settings,” the statement said.

Onions grown in Canada were not associated with this outbreak, the Agency added.

Rosie DiManno: Growing up is a torment at the best of times, never mind in times like these

Coming of age in the epoch of the coronavirus is a bummer.

Just when young adults are starting to spread their wings, exploring independence, punching through the parental bubble wrap, they’ve been stuffed back into infantilizing stasis.

The sheer fun of salad days has been smothered by a pandemic. When they do venture out in youth packs, cue the lectures and shaming. Because that’s always worked so well, yes?

Hard to be a rebel without a cause — the essence of angsty young adulthood — when you’re fingered for causing community contamination, bringing COVID-19 into the household, knocking off your grandparents. As London, Ont., Mayor Ed Holder berated last month, amidst positive case counts that climbed to levels not seen since the spring, scores linked to off-campus partying by Western University students: “You are going to kill someone.”

And turn down that godawful music while you’re at it.

No graduation ceremonies. No proms. No campus activities. No concerts. No moshing. No hangin’ out — except maybe at the mall, idly. Which fortunately is at least one popular time-waster not yanked back to forbidden in Ontario hot spot municipalities. Kingston has approved new fines for anyone hosting off-campus house parties, Queen’s University even threatening to expel students who do so.

Browbeating does not change behaviour.

“There are so many milestones that we have lost, like graduation,” says Em Hayes, a youth engagement facilitator at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health who is pursuing a masters in teaching. “Going back to school has been very challenging. I’m exhausted talking to a computer screen all day. I miss my community although most of us are also finding new ways to create communities.

“You don’t realize how much it meant to be in the physical presence of others until it was taken away.’’

Little wonder that mental health — anxiety segueing to depression — is cause for acute concern among pulse-takers of the youthful demographic in Canada.

“The pandemic and its restrictions are uniquely impacting young people because it impacts their developmental milestones and tasks right now,” says Joanna Henderson, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, who is extensively involved with mental health initiatives for children and youth at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. “It doesn’t take long as adults to forget what it was like to be 16 or 18 or 20.”

Growing up is a torment at the best of times. These are the worst of times.

“They’re wired to be engaging socially, to be moving towards autonomy, to be learning, to be securing employment,” Henderson points out. “All of those things are being impacted by the pandemic and their restrictions. We have young people who are living by themselves, completely alone, and it may be the first time that they’ve moved out on their own. So, extremely difficult circumstances to cope with. And we have other young people who are in very close multi-generational homes in small dwellings who are experiencing tremendous economic stress.’’

But see a photo on social media of teenagers enjoying a bush party and BOOM — public health officials, politicians and online nags go berserk. How selfish. Of course they’re selfish. Show me a young person who isn’t self-absorbed. Traditionally, that’s why we cut them slack — because they’re not yet mature and conscientious.

Data shows more people in their 20s have tested positive for COVID-19 than any other age group. As of Oct. 16, 18.5 per cent of positive cases related to people aged 20 to 29 across Canada, 11.6 per cent among those 19 and under. The upside, doubtless due to their prevailing good medical health, is that they account for just 3.1 per cent of hospitalizations, the second lowest age bracket.

“My observation is there’s a focus on the 18-35 year old age range because we’re seeing increased rates there,” Henderson continues. “That is sometimes expressed in judgmental ways and I have concerns about that because the places that opened up during Stage 3 were places where young people are commonly employed and residences in universities, places of predominantly young people.”

Young people who, according to various studies and polls, are experiencing anxiety and depression, as high as a 20 per cent increase in that cohort.

“We haven’t given as much guidance as we need to on how to make those complex weighing of different places, how to respect the fact that we have young people out there kind of on the front line of our economy reopening,” says Henderson. “Recreation and partying is part of the story but certainly not the whole story. It’s easy to say stay six feet apart and wear a mask. But in actuality, we have pretty conflicting messages circulating right now about what’s important in our communities, in our economy, and how we’re expecting all people, including young people, to move forward.”

What Hayes describes as “the vagueness of the rules that are put out there.”

Henderson: “These are moments of interactions and transactions that are happening. It’s really incumbent on decision-makers and adults to communicate clearly and realistically if we actually want our messaging to resonate with young people.”

Considering that half the world’s population is younger than 30, this demographic has hardly any say-so in how COVID-19 is being targeted and the extent to which for-the-good-of-everybody restrictions are screwing up their lives. There is, for example, no youth voice at the “experts” table that Premier Doug Ford is all the time citing. There isn’t even a young people’s table, as is common at those Thanksgiving gatherings we harangued into not having last weekend.

“Young people need to be at the table in these conversations because they’re experts in their own lives,” says Henderson. “Meaningfully at the table, not in a tokenistic way, where they can share their expertise.”

The tenor of the demographic was reflected in the results of a survey led by Henderson in her capacity as executive director of Youth Wellness Hubs Ontario, a government-funded initiative to transform youth mental health services in the province. The one-stop-shop model has been implemented in 10 communities across Ontario thus far, though virtually because of the pandemic. The cross-sectional survey was conducted with 622 youth participants, which allowed for open-ended answers, included both young people who’ve already connected with mental health services and those who hadn’t.

The result revealed a “statistically significant” deterioration of mental health across the clinical and community samples — 68 per cent of youth in the clinical sample and 39.9 per cent in the community sample met screening criteria for an “internalizing disorder.” Perhaps surprisingly, substance use had actually declined in both cohorts since the pandemic struck (as of May data), although 23.2 per cent of youth (clinical) and 3.0 (community) could be described as having a substance use disorder.

As the survey concluded: “Among youth with histories of mental health concerns, the pandemic context poses a significant risk for exacerbation of need. In addition, youth may experience the onset of new difficulties.”

These are the years, from teens to mid-20s, when mental health issues often manifest themselves.

What’s most impressed Henderson, however, are the coping mechanisms that young adults are seizing upon to mentally and emotionally survive the pandemic, without scars.

All kinds of different strategies, from journaling, to engaging with art, to meditation, to exercise, to gardening and, of course, connecting on virtual platforms such as Instagram, including livestreamed events.

One Hub community, in a particularly economically disadvantaged area, collectively secured food donations, created an online cooking course — teaching each other — and made food baskets for distribution.

“That’s not what we would conventionally think of as mental health services. However, it was very enriching for young people’s mental health in the context of skill-building, the sense of being engaged in a productive activity, supporting their families and connecting with the community.”

There was, in fact, a subset of the young adult community surveyed that reported improved mental health during the lockdown. “People talked about the stress of being so busy, having that alleviated. We heard about the relief from school-specific stressors, varying forms of, ‘I didn’t realize how stressful my life was until I’ve been forced to take a break.’”

Many also reconnected more deeply with families. Prior to the pandemic, how many teens really wanted to hang out with mom and dad?

Occasional folly notwithstanding — young people throughout history view themselves as indestructible, no matter the safety warnings drummed into their skulls — they get it, they get COVID-19, they get masking and physical distancing. But the coronavirus has robbed them of so much in their waning days of innocence.

Says Em Hayes: “Youth understand the gravity of the situation.”

Rosie DiManno is a Toronto-based columnist covering sports and current affairs for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

These 7 Ontario stores were selling ‘dangerous’ sex enhancement products

Health Canada has either seized or asked owners to remove sexual enhancement products from seven convenience stores across the province this week, as the products “are labelled to contain or have been tested and found to contain dangerous ingredients.”

Ingredients such as tadalafil and sildenafil, which are found in the majority of the products listed from Ontario, should only be used under the supervision of a healthcare professional and can cause dangerous and potentially life-threatening side effects for those taking nitrate drugs, or anyone with heart problems.

Other side effects of these two ingredients include headaches, facial flushing, indigestion, dizziness, abnormal vision, and hearing loss.

Yohimbine, another ingredient found in some of the products, can cause serious effects for people with high blood pressure, or heart, kidney or liver disease.

Testosterone compounds, found in one product, have also been linked to fatal health risks.

The following products were seized at the locations below as of Oct. 21:

A & J Variety (324 Rawdon St. Brantford, ON)

Product: Rhino 15 gum (contains tadalafil)

Lucky’s Variety & Coin Laundry (81 Stanley St. Brantford, ON)

Product: Rhino 69 Platinum 35000 (contains tadalafil)

Dundas West. Convenience (5449 Dundas St. W, Etobicoke, ON)

Product: Black Panther Extreme 25000 (contains sildenafil and tadalafil)

Product: Elephant 9000 (contains sildenafil and tadalafil)

Product: Wild Bull Gold Extreme (contains sildenafil, tadalafil and testosterone propionate)

Product: Rhino 69 Platinum 35000 (contains tadalafil)

Dairy Jug (3884 Bloor St. W Etobicoke, ON)

Product: Rhino 25 Titanium 200K (contains sildenafil)

Hoffman Mini Mart (124 Hoffman St. Kitchener, ON)

Product: Black Panther (contains yohimbe)

Product: Maximum Power Bang All Night Long (contains sildenafil)

Product: Rhino 7 Platinum 5000 (contains sildenafil and yohimbe)

Stop 2 Shop (101 Hazelglen Dr. Unit 3A, Kitchener)

Product: 3800 Hard Rock (contains yohimbe)

Big Bear Food Mart (159 Highland Rd. E., Kitchener)

Product: 3800 Hard Rock (contains yohimbe)

Health Canada advises anyone with these products to discontinue use and to consult a healthcare professional with any concerns.

For further information, visit .

Penetanguishene correctional officers not looking to ditch OPSEU

The province-wide movement by correctional officers to leave the Ontario Public Service Employees’ Union (OPSEU) and create their own autonomous union isn’t garnering much backing from employees at the Central North Correctional Centre in Penetanguishene.

“There is some minimal support locally,” said Richard Dionne, president of OPSEU Local 369, which represents staff at CNCC. “However, it is not supported by the OPSEU Local 369 executive.”

Thousands of corrections workers across the province are reportedly fed up with OPSEU. They have enlisted the assistance of the Confederation of National Trade Unions and are trying to create the Ontario Association of Correctional Employees (OACE). This new organization is aiming to establish a corrections-only association that will advocate and fight for the specific needs of Ontario’s correctional employees.

“Those pushing for the change in unions believe they have been misrepresented or under-represented by OPSEU,” said Dionne.

OACE has until Dec. 30 to raid members from OPSEU. In order to be recognized as a bargaining agent by the Ministry of Labour, the new union would need at least 40 per cent of OPSEU’s correctional membership. 

Coco’s Cookies brings a sweet treat to Orillia’s West Street

Nicole Hepinstall learned to bake under the guiding hand of her late grandmother.

“She taught me everything she knew,” Hepinstall said. “She taught me all her little secrets.”

But it wasn’t until a pandemic-related layoff from her job as a receptionist and makeup artist at a local hair salon that Hepinstall decided to pursue the sweet side of commerce as a full-time business.

The result is , where cookies and bars are specialties of the house, along with garlic-cheddar biscuits, doughnuts, muffins, and buns.

“There are certain things that are definitely bestsellers that have a reputation, for sure — double-chocolate macaroons and s’mores cookies,” Hepinstall said.

Gluten-free and vegan options are available.

Hepinstall previously sold baked goods as a side business before venturing into the bricks-and-mortar operation.


TYPE: Bakery

LOCATION:

OFFERINGS: Cookies, squares, biscuits, and more.

HOURS: Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Friday from 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.

PHONE:

‘Ongoing investigation’: Pet hedgehogs linked to salmonella cases in Ontario

Public Health authorities have linked pet hedgehogs to dozens of salmonella cases across Canada, including four in Ontario.

There are 32 cases in Canada, up from 11 early last month in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Quebec.

In its ongoing investigation, The Public Health Agency of Canada has found that individuals who became ill with salmonella reported having had direct contact with a hedgehog prior to the illness. The pets were reportedly purchased from a variety of places, including pet stores, breeders and online, and investigators are looking to determine whether there is a common source.

The agency recommends Canadians practise good hand hygiene when handling hedgehogs during this period of time and reminds citizens that hedgehogs can be carrying salmonella even if they appear to be healthy.

Other tips include the following:

• Do not consume food or drink, or touch your mouth, while handling a hedgehog.

• Do not kiss or snuggle with a hedgehog.

• Always wash your hands thoroughly after touching a hedgehog or any items or food that they come into contact with.

• Do not keep hedgehogs around children younger than five and always supervise children who are playing with a hedgehog.

• Make sure to clean surfaces the hedgehog touches with soap and water, and wash any clothing with the warmest water possible.

• Do not bathe hedgehogs in kitchen sinks or bathrooms.

• Keep hedgehogs and their items in a separate environment.

• Note that stressful environments can cause hedgehogs to shed salmonella.

Salmonella symptoms in humans include fever, chills, diarrhea, abdominal cramps, headaches, nausea and vomiting, and last about four to seven days.

For further information, visit