Barrie man convicted of running over ex-best friend in jealous rage

Barrie man convicted of running over ex-best friend in jealous rage

A Barrie man who drove his truck into his best friend in a fit of jealousy faces a sentencing hearing Dec. 4.

Isidoro Pacheco pleaded guilty Sept. 14 to dangerous driving causing bodily harm.

The court heard Pacheco had suspected his wife and friend were having an affair during the summer of 2018. 

On Sept. 18, Pacheco’s pickup truck struck his estranged friend while he was helping his wife pack up her belongings on Pacheco’s driveway.

The court heard Pacheco’s truck jumped the curb as he returned home early from work at about 11:30 a.m. to see his ex-friend carrying “something” from the house.

“At about that same moment, his truck veered left, jumped the curb and drove diagonally across a driveway, a boulevard, a sidewalk, and his next-door-neighbour’s front lawn,” a court document states. “It struck (the victim), causing him to fly through the air and make a hard landing, face down, some distance away.”

Although Pacheco pleaded guilty, he testified that he did not intend to run over his former friend.  

Pacheco told the court he lost control of his truck when he stuck his head out the window to get a better look at the “person” he saw at his front door.

But Justice Cary Boswell ruled the evidence showed the crash was intentional.

“I do not believe or accept Mr. Pacheco’s version of events leading up to the collision,” Boswell said in a written decision. “Indeed, I consider his account impossible to accept.”

After the collision, Pacheco’s wife knelt beside the victim and said, “Oh my God, you’ve killed (him).”

When Barrie police officers arrived, they found Pacheco hiding under a pool cover in the backyard holding a steak knife. He was arrested without incident.

Barrie police were also at Pacheco’s home the night before the crash, when officers told him to stop throwing his wife’s belongings onto the front lawn.

The case resumes Dec. 4 in Barrie Superior Court of Justice.

Canada has been reluctant to embrace rapid tests. This Harvard epidemiologist says we can’t afford to wait

Canada is poised to be the next country to deploy mass rapid testing for COVID-19 in a gambit that Harvard epidemiologist Michael Mina says could immediately stem the spread of the virus.

As an epidemiologist and assistant professor at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Mina has been leading research around COVID-19 testing throughout the pandemic.

Rapid at-home testing could be a COVID-19 game changer, he said.

Mina argues that government regulations should be changed to encourage manufacturers to develop the tests and public funding rolled out to assist companies with building them.

Other countries have had success with or are moving to use rapid testing to control the spread of COVID-19. In Canada, some rapid-testing systems, which provide results in minutes, are approved and being widely used. But the tests aren’t approved for household use and top public health officials remain skeptical since, generally speaking, a faster test yields less accurate results. However, when it comes to an effective testing strategy, Mina says accuracy isn’t everything.

Even as the world is preparing for the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines, with Canada expecting to begin inoculating people come January, Mina is warning that a rapid-test plan is urgently needed since the spread of the virus will continue to spread for months into 2021 and the dangers will remain real.

Rapid testing is a misunderstood strategy and one that other countries have used effectively in slowing the pandemic, he said. As Canada’s case numbers soar, Mina said this country should do it too.

“For Canada, if you could build 1 to 2 million tests per day, you could actually accomplish this, and one start-up company could produce that,” he said.

The pandemic calls for complete mobilization and a paradigm shift, argued Mina. “We’re literally in a war with a virus.”

At the start of the pandemic, Mina set out to study one question: how accurate does a test need to be to curb the spread of a virus at the community level?

Over months of research, Mina has found that developing a testing program which can identify infectious people and pull them out of the community is what’s crucial. The best way to do that? It’s not about using the most accurate tests, argues Mina. It’s using tests that deliver results quickly across the broadest possible population and using those tests often.

“In every single scenario, the test that can be scaled more widely, can be used with frequency… is incredibly more powerful than a good (gold standard, lab-based) PCR test that is not able to be scaled,” he said.

However, provincial health authorities about using rapid tests at all, noting that many of the rapid antigen tests aren’t as accurate as lab-based tests, and experts have levelled criticism about this kind of mass “at-home” plan saying it could limit data collection and create a false sense of security.

Mina contends that they’re thinking about it all wrong.

His plan calls for millions of people to test themselves at home multiple times a week using rapid antigen tests.

Mina said PCR tests, while good at diagnosing someone, are actually less effective than rapid antigen tests when looking at the pandemic through a public health lens. That means testing as many people as possible as fast as possible.

And that in turn is useful because quickly understanding who is infectious and urging them to self-isolate helps control the spread, Mina said.

If 50 per cent of people tested themselves twice a week, and those who tested positive self-isolated, the spread of the coronavirus would slow significantly, said Mina. “You don’t need to get perfect; you just need to stop most spread.”

Mina pointed to countries in Europe for examples of successful mass rapid testing programs and said Canada should follow their lead.

In October, when Slovakia was seeing exponential growth in infections, it acquired 13 million rapid antigen tests and went on to test two thirds of its population over one weekend. Mina said it’s a “shining example” of how a rapid testing plan could work since “they’ve seen incidents go from exponentially increasing to seeing the epidemic and the outbreak come crashing down.”

“Within a week and a half, they saw 50 per cent reduction in cases,” he said.

In November, Liverpool, England, was announced as the site of that country’s first mass rapid testing program. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has indicated he’d expand rapid testing across the country and for those who tested every day with negative results, life could go on as normal, according to the BBC.

Mina has also been working with the Austrian government which recently announced a mass rapid testing plan and was also in talks with a team from the Ontario government in late November. A spokesperson for the province said the government was interested in Mina’s research findings around rapid testing but didn’t go into detail about any plans it was considering for rapid tests.

While Ontario Premier Doug Ford dubbed rapid tests “a game changer” last month, the Star that Public Health Ontario’s head of microbiology outlined how they don’t perform as well as lab-based tests. Dr. Bonnie Henry, British Columbia’s provincial health officer, said in November that rapid testing was “not a panacea,” especially for long-term-care homes.

Katherine Fierlbeck, a health policy expert and political science professor at Dalhousie University, said there are several issues that arise with rapid at-home testing on a widespread scale.

First, the tests must be designed so people can use them correctly to get a reliable result, she said. Secondly, people may have a false sense of security when they test negative raising the odds they will infect others if the test result is wrong. Finally, Fierlbeck said that with mass at-home testing, there’s no requirement to record a positive test result and so governments lose the ability to track data.

“This whole thing about rapid screening, I see the logic, but the lower the threshold, the more complications arise on a number of different angles,” she said.

Mina said he hears those critiques often and disagrees they would pose a problem. The tests can be designed to be very simple to use: a person would swab their nose, drop it into a tube, and add a piece of paper, he said. A nation-wide education strategy combined with a simple-to-use test “can do wonders,” he added.

The false sense of security argument, meanwhile, is one Mina says is “an age-old concern” that is often overblown. Critics said putting seatbelts in a car would mean people would drive more recklessly or that having an HIV test would mean people would have sex more often, said Mina. “Of course, we know that that’s false now — it’s much better to know your status.”

“This argument always comes up the moment you try to take a public health tool and give it directly to the individual,” he said.

Data collection would be voluntary if the country were under a mass rapid test program, he added, because the goal of rapid test screening isn’t surveillance. Additionally, Mina said he believes that by getting people to voluntarily input their status using their smart phone after the country provided access to millions of at-home tests, “you’ll have more data, not less, flowing to the public health agencies.”

While Canada has shipped more than 5.5 million rapid tests to all the provinces and territories, with millions more expected in the months to come, they’ve received a frosty reception with some jurisdictions saying they wouldn’t use them at all and others planning to only use them on a limited basis.

These tests, which deliver results in minutes rather than days and have to be administered by health-care professionals (they aren’t for at-home use and no at-home tests have received Health Canada approval), are widely considered to be less effective at accurately identifying the virus. Provinces are also reconfirming the results of the rapid antigen tests by submitting them for additional testing using the gold standard PCR system in a lab.

But Mina said the situation across the globe calls for mass mobilization efforts. He worries that promising news of vaccine developments might move the need to fund a massive rapid-testing program off a government’s radar.

“I think that has really blinded everyone’s ability or willingness to really take bold initiative, to tackle the virus now with the tools we have today,” he said. “In World War Two we built B-24 bombers — every 63 minutes they rolled off the Ford assembly line. That’s how we should be thinking about this.

“This is a virus that’s crippling our economies, it’s crippling our social structure, and it’s killing hundreds of thousands of people on our soils, as bad as any war that we’ve fought in decades and decades.”

With files from The Canadian Press and the Associated Press

Kieran Leavitt is an Edmonton-based reporter covering provincial affairs for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

Nearly $100,000 in damage caused by fire at former Collingwood pizza joint site

The cause of a blaze at the ex-site of a well-known Collingwood pizza joint has yet to be determined.

Collingwood Fire Department crews responded to a call at the former Pie Wood Fired Pizza Joint restaurant Oct. 2 at about 8:15 p.m. Upon arrival, firefighters saw flames and heavy smoke coming from the roof area.

No injuries were reported, but there was about $100,000 in damage to the building’s interior, roof and attic, Fire Chief Ross Parr told Simcoe.com Saturday morning.

Pie had operated on the premises, at , for six years before closing the location in May. The restaurant’s lease had expired, but with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, business also .

“It’s hard to hang on to a 6,000-square-foot restaurant when it’s just takeout,” co-owner Craig Russell said in an interview in the spring. “We’re not confident that the occupancy levels will be the same once COVID calms down. We thought it was best to sit tight.”

Pho Le, an Asian cuisine restaurant, has since taken over the space.

Pie still operates restaurants in Barrie, Midland and Muskoka.

— With files from John Edwards

It’s time to consider shutting down casinos, theatres and malls, leading health expert says

As COVID-19 cases continue to pile up, a leading health expert says the Ontario government should consider shutting down casinos, movie theatres and shopping malls. Industry defenders, meanwhile, say closures would be unnecessary and unfair.

“Closing them completely should be a last resort. But I think we need to consider everything right now. How surgical can we afford to be?” said Dr. Abdu Sharkawy, an infectious disease specialist with the University Health Network.

Tuesday, Ontario had 554 new COVID-19 cases, down from a record-setting 700 the day before. But Sharkawy warns we haven’t come close to the peak of the second wave.

“I have no doubt that we’ll be seeing a thousand cases per day within the next two to three weeks,” said Sharkawy, who was surprised to see some Ontario casinos reopen on Monday for the first time since March. Casinos had been allowed to open since the province hit Stage 3 in mid-July, but casino operators had been negotiating unsuccessfully with the province to boost a 50-customer cap.

“They’re closing strip clubs and cutting bar hours but casinos are still open? Gambling is not essential. All it will take is one outbreak at a facility like this to show why we shouldn’t be supporting them right now,” said Sharkawy.

Those casinos are all managed by Great Canadian Gaming Co., which runs 11 casinos in Ontario, including at Woodbine and Mohawk.

Shutting casinos down wouldn’t be fair to the industry’s 17,000 workers in Ontario, said Paul Burns, president and CEO of the Canadian Gaming Association, the casino industry’s national trade association.

“If they roll things back to Stage 2 for the entire province, or an entire region, that’s their prerogative. If they cherry-pick one sector of one industry, that’s problematic,” said Burns, who pointed out that casinos which have opened are nowhere near their standard capacity, and are missing some standard features: booze and table games.

“We’re the safest part of the entire hospitality industry, because we’re already so heavily regulated. And now, there are only 50 people allowed in at a time,” said Burns.

A spokesperson for the provincial ministry of health said the government is still monitoring the COVID situation across Ontario, and could implement further restrictions.

“The government, in consultation with public health experts, continues to review trends from a range of criteria on an ongoing basis to determine if public health measures need to be adjusted or tightened,” said Anna Miller.

Allowing just 50 customers into a casino that’s designed for thousands isn’t a money-maker, said Burns. Not that it’s being done for charitable purposes, he admitted.

“They wanted to demonstrate to public health officials that they could open and operate in a safe manner. It’s not economically viable at 50 people,” said Burns. Eventually, Burns said the casino industry would like to see more gamblers coming through the doors.

“That conversation stopped when the province announced a 28-day moratorium on more opening up. It’s a conversation that we’ll continue at the appropriate time. We recognize that now is not the time,” Burns said.

Mall operator Cadillac Fairview, which runs properties including the Eaton Centre, says it’s ready if the government clamps down again.

“Like many other businesses, we are closely monitoring the current COVID-19 environment and local public health updates with regards to potential restrictions being reimposed. Should this be the case, we have plans in place to act quickly and as mandated,” said Cadillac Fairview spokesperson Janine Ramparas.

A spokesperson for the country’s largest movie theatre chain said the company would follow whatever rules are put in place, but said their theatres are safe.

“I wouldn’t want to speculate about what may or may not happen, but above all our primary concern is the health and well-being of our team and guests. We have proudly and safely welcomed back over 1.5 million guests to our theatres since Canada Day, but will of course follow all heath and safety guidelines put in place at the federal, provincial and municipal level should things change,” said Cineplex spokesperson Sarah Van Lange.

Today’s coronavirus news: De Villa calls 236 new infections ‘a warning to the entire city;’ Outbreak declared at Glen Park PS, first at a Toronto school; Ontario health units report 515 cases

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

6:29 p.m.: British Columbia has recorded 98 new cases of COVID-19, for a total of 8,641 infections.

A joint statement from the Health Ministry and the office of provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says one more person has died, for a death toll of 230 people since the start of the pandemic.

Sixty-two patients are in hospital, 19 of them in intensive care.

British Columbians are being urged step back from connecting in person to staying connected in other, safer ways as the cooler weather arrives

6:10 p.m.: Ontario’s regional health units are reporting another day with more than 500 new confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases, according to the Star’s latest count.

As of 5 p.m. Friday, the health units had reported another 515 cases in the last 24 hours, in line with a trend that has seen the rate of new infections grow at an accelerating pace since early August.

The province’s seven-day average for new cases is now at 430 new cases daily, slightly less than double what the health units were reporting 11 days ago on Sept. 14. Earlier this week, that average was growing slightly, on pace to double about every nine days.

Ontario last saw such rapid exponential growth before the pandemic’s first peak in the spring. Although Ontario is still well below that peak level — about 600 infections a day, reported in late April — the current rate of case growth, if sustained, would see the average eclipse that rate by early October.

Friday saw significant case totals reported across the province: Toronto reported 236 new cases, its most for any single day since mid-May; Peel Region reported 98; York Region added 44; Ottawa 41; Waterloo Region 18; Halton Region 19; Middlesex-London 14 and the Eastern Ontario Health Unit 10.

One new fatal case was reported, in York.

The province has now seen a total of 51,313 confirmed or probable cases of COVID-19, including 2,877 deaths.

The vast majority of the province’s COVID-19 patients have since recovered, and the recent rise in cases has not yet resulted in an equivalent jump in hospitalizations or deaths. That’s in part because the recent increase has not yet hit the vulnerable outbreak settings — like long-term-care homes — . Rates of hospitalization and death have also tended to lag behind weeks behind case jumps.

The province lists 3,899 active cases of the disease, a number that has been rising in recent weeks. (By the same calculation, Ontario saw hit a peak of 5,675 active cases in late-April.)

The Star’s count includes some patients reported as “probable” COVID-19 cases, meaning they have symptoms and contacts or travel history that indicate , but have not yet received a positive lab test.

The province cautions its separate data, published daily at 10:30 a.m., may be , saying that in the event of a discrepancy, “data reported by (the health units) should be considered the most up to date.”

5:15 p.m.: The minority Liberal government with the New Democrats over legislation to support workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, likely securing the support needed to remain in power.

“We are entering the second wave and millions of Canadians are still struggling to make ends meet,” government House leader Pablo Rodriguez said Friday on Twitter.

“We now have an agreement with the NDP on a bill that will deliver the help that Canadians need. It’s by working together that we will get through this pandemic.”

The Liberal throne speech introduced Wednesday needs the support of at least one of the major opposition parties for the minority government to survive a confidence vote, or else Canada could head into a federal election as parts of the country are already in a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has spelled out the conditions for earning the support of his party: legislation assuring that Canadians left jobless due to the pandemic won’t have their emergency benefits cut and that Canadians who fall ill will get paid sick leave.

4:30 p.m. (updated): Toronto medical officer of health Dr. Eileen de Villa is ordering four businesses to close until they satisfy conditions spelled out under the Health Protection and Promotion Act.

The businesses are “hospitality” focused. One of the businesses was serving food, buffet style, which is a clear violation. Some businesses were also uncooperative with investigators.

De Villa said they became aware of staff working while ill and being pressured to work while sick. She said she can’t identify individual businesses right now because orders still being served.

“These are not actions I take lightly,” de Villa said.

Toronto Public Health tweeted out a graphic on how one night out in the city led to 20 cases and at least 80 people exposed to the virus who had to self-monitor, self-isolate and get tested.

4:15 p.m. (updated): There were 236 new infections in Toronto reported Friday, a daily jump big enough that it’s “a warning to the entire city,” medical officer of health Dr. Eileen de Villa told reporters.

Toronto Public Health has also declared an outbreak at Glen Park Public School, the first such declaration at a school in this city. Two students have been confirmed positive, which fits the definition of an outbreak.

The two students have been isolated to recover. One teacher and two class cohorts — one of 17 students and one of 18 students — have all been sent home to self-isolate and will stay home for 14 days. Parents have been notified in writing.

“Today’s news is expected,” de Villa says of school outbreak, adding that they expect more to be declared.

On Friday afternoon, a total of 39 public schools across Toronto reported infections among students or staff or both.

Neither the Toronto District School Board, with 29 affected schools, nor the Toronto Catholic District School Board, with the other 10, has closed any facilities.

The TDSB reported 20 infected infected students and 14 infected teachers.

The Catholic board eight infected students and three infected staff.

3:50 p.m.: The federal government ran a deficit of $148.6 billion during the first four months of its 2020-2021 fiscal year, the result of unprecedented spending in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The result compared with a deficit of $1.6 billion for the same period in the 2019-2020 fiscal year.

In its monthly fiscal monitor, the Finance Department says program expenses for the four-month period of April to July hit $215.7 billion, up $111.1 billion, or 106.2 per cent, from the same period a year earlier.

About $50.4 billion of the overall increase of $55.1 billion from the same period the year before was related to the Canada Emergency Response Benefit, which starts to expire this weekend.

3:45 p.m.: WestJet Airlines Ltd. is warning furloughed workers who receive the federal wage subsidy they will see their pay cut by up to 53 per cent starting Sunday.

The maximum weekly payment for more than 3,000 employees on furlough — a mandatory leave of absence — who rely on the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS) will drop to $400, down from $847, according to a WestJet memo sent out Wednesday.

Flight attendants called on the government to clarify when and how much money will arrive in company coffers via the federal subsidy in order determine whether wages can return to current levels.

“WestJet can’t float our wages until Ottawa fills in the blanks, so our members are seeing their cheques cut in half,“ said Chris Rauenbusch, who represents about 4,000 WestJet flight attendants — 2,500 are furloughed — with the Canadian Union of Public Employees.

Effective Sept. 27, the pay cut applies to all furloughed cabin crew and corporate employees. It was not clear whether WestJet’s 700 furloughed pilots are also affected.

3:30 p.m.: Manitoba’s chief provincial public health officer is making masks mandatory in indoor public spaces in Winnipeg, as cases of COVID-19 continue to surge in the capital city.

Dr. Brent Roussin said Friday there are 54 new cases of the virus in the province — 44 of them are in the Winnipeg health region.

In response, the city has been moved up to a code orange classification in the province’s pandemic response system.

Indoor and outdoor gatherings are also be restricted to 10 people.

The mask mandate comes into effect on Monday. Roussin said it will be in place for at least a month.

The restrictions will also apply to communities in the Winnipeg Metropolitan Region surrounding the city.

Earlier this week, the province’s top doctor said that in half of recent cases people had visited bars, pubs and restaurants.

Public health officials are consulting with the restaurant industry, Roussin said, and further restrictions could be coming.

For now, restaurants and bars can be open but people must wear a mask when they aren’t seated at a table eating or drinking.

There have been 1,764 COVID-19 cases in Manitoba and 487 are currently active. Thirteen people are in hospital and six are in intensive care. Nineteen people have died.

2 p.m. (updated): Ontario is making bars and restaurants shut down earlier and is closing all strip clubs in a bid to curb rising COVID-19 rates in the province.

The measures take effect Saturday, with bars and restaurants ordered to stop serving alcohol after 11 p.m. and to close by midnight except for takeout and delivery.

The province is also ordering all strip clubs to close.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said outbreak clusters in the establishments, particularly among people in the 20-39 age group who account for the majority of new infections, are driving the growth of COVID-19, along with private social gatherings.

The move comes after the province changed the rules surrounding social gatherings last week, lowering the number of people permitted at outdoor events to 25 and indoor events to 10.

Ontario reported 409 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, and one new death related to the virus.

1:45 p.m. A court has ordered the Ontario government to restore health insurance coverage for residents who face medical emergencies while travelling outside of the country.

The by Premier Doug Ford’s government on Jan. 1, when the province stopped paying for emergency health care coverage for those who travelled abroad.

In a ruling released Wednesday, the Ontario Divisional Court said the province must reinstate the $200-to-$400-per-day coverage for emergency in-patient services and the as much to $50 per day for emergency outpatient and doctor services.

“The Canadian Snowbird Association is pleased with the court’s decision,” said Karen Huestis, president of the association that took the government to court.

“The ruling affirms the right of Ontario residents to out-of-country emergency insurance coverage, as required by the Canada Health Act.”

12:58 p.m. A group representing amusement fair operators is calling for government support, saying the COVID-19 pandemic has dealt a severe blow to its industry.

The Canadian Association of Amusement Operators says its members have lost nearly all of their projected revenue for the year as many annual fairs and carnivals have been cancelled.

The group says operators still have to deal with expenses such as insurance, rent and maintenance despite not being able to hold their events.

It says fairs offer cultural and economic value to communities, noting that individual amusement operators can employ between seven to 100 employees.

The group warns that without support, such events may not be able to return in the future.

It is asking both federal and provincial governments for support.

12:48 p.m. The federal Conservatives have been denied their request to have the House of Commons sit this weekend to debate new COVID-19 aid legislation.

Opposition House leader Gerard Deltell said earlier Friday the provisions in the bill demand detailed and urgent scrutiny.

Bill C-2 is scheduled for debate next Monday and Tuesday.

Deltell proposed that all of Sunday be devoted to studying it as well, in what’s known as a committee of the whole.

That format gives MPs a chance to grill the government without the more restrictive timelines that characterize regular debate.

But the Conservative motion in the House of Commons did not receive the unanimous consent it needed to pass Friday.

12:05 p.m. The federal government has signed a deal with AstraZeneca to get up to 20 million doses of its experimental vaccine for COVID-19.

At the same time Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada is spending $440 million to join the COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access Facility, known as COVAX, as well as the COVAX market fund to help less wealthy countries buy access to vaccines as well.

Canada’s commitment under COVAX is split equally in half, with $220 million securing 15 million more doses of vaccines for Canadians, and $220 million to help low and middle-income nations buy doses.

The deal with AstraZeneca is the sixth such private pact with vaccine makers for Canada.

12:00 p.m. Health officials in New Brunswick are reporting a new case of COVID-19 today.

The new case is an individual between 30 and 39 years old in the Bathurst region.

Public Health says the case is related to travel from outside of the Atlantic bubble and the individual is self-isolating.

The number of confirmed cases in the province is now 200 while 191 people have recovered and there are seven active cases.

11:34 a.m. The federal Conservatives say they want the House of Commons to sit this weekend to debate new COVID-19 aid legislation.

Opposition House leader Gerard Deltell says the provisions in the bill demand detailed and urgent scrutiny.

Past COVID-19 legislation has passed fairly swiftly with all-party consent but at the time, Parliament was not sitting as normal.

Now it is, and Deltell is suggesting that putting the new bill through the ordinary legislative paces will take too long.

Among other things, Bill C-2 would create a new benefits regime to support those who have lost jobs due to the COVID-19 pandemic; the existing emergency response benefit is scheduled to end Saturday.

He wouldn’t say whether his party actually agrees or disagrees with those measures, only that Conservative MPs want to ensure they are fully scrutinized to make sure they are best for Canadians.

11:30 a.m.: A Queen’s University student who lives in residence has tested positive for COVID-19.

The Kingston, Ont., university says the student is self-isolating.

Close contacts of the individual will be contacted by public health officials as the case is investigated.

11:10 a.m.: Quebec has recorded 637 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the total number of cases in the province to 70,307, the provincial health ministry said on Friday.

While there were no deaths from COVID-19 recorded during the past 24 hours, four deaths between Sept. 13 and 23 are now believed to be from the disease, brining the total number of deaths in Quebec to 5,814.

11:03 a.m. The number of total active cases in publicly funded schools across Ontario has jumped to 238.

, the province reported 29 more school-related cases — 10 more students were infected for a total of 110; 10 more staff members for a total of 50 and 9 more individuals who weren’t identified for a total of 78.

There are 198 schools with an active case, which the province notes is 4.1 per cent of the 4,828 publicly funded schools.

11:03 a.m. Some Ontario pharmacies started offering COVID-19 tests on Friday as the province tries to ease the burden on busy assessment centres.

The appointment-only tests, however, can only be requested by certain asymptomatic individuals — and just who qualifies and how they can get the test was already causing some confusion.

One woman alerted to possible exposure by the COVID Alert app lined up to get a test before a Shoppers Drug Mart opened at 8 a.m. in downtown Toronto but learned she wasn’t eligible.

Laura Smith said she also didn’t realize pharmacy testing was by appointment only, and that she struggled to find information after getting the alert Thursday night.

“I didn’t see where to schedule so I came by,” said Smith, who said it was her first time trying to get tested.

“Now I know,” she said with a shrug, adding that she planned to head to an assessment centre to wait in line.

The pharmacy tests — available at up to 60 locations across Ontario — are being offered to select asymptomatic individuals, such as those with loved ones in long-term care homes, close contacts of a case or high-risk workers

10:43 a.m. In late May, as spring turned to summer, Premier Doug Ford told every Ontarian who wanted a test to go get one — even if they didn’t have symptoms. “Just show up,” he said.

This week, as summer turned to fall, that offer was revoked. Ontario asymptomatic people who arrive at assessment centres and have no exposure to a confirmed case or outbreak, with narrow exceptions, officials said Thursday.

Data from the province’s public health agency backs up the policy switch, demonstrating that this type of testing is of extremely low value, while carrying significant costs. Swabbing huge volumes of asymptomatic people burdens the system — contributing to the long lineups and lagging turnaround times that have plagued Ontario — and discovers few new cases.

Experts praised Thursday’s announcement, calling it overdue.

But they warned it could be challenging to communicate the change to the public — especially since Ford announced just Wednesday that 60 pharmacies would offer COVID testing, but only for asymptomatic people. Officials clarified Thursday that pharmacies would offer tests to those with confirmed exposures and other targeted groups.

10:30 a.m. The next Ontario election is supposed to be 615 days away, but the Progressive Conservatives will officially nominate the party’s 72 MPPs as candidates on Saturday, the Star has learned.

Senior Tory insiders, speaking confidentially in order to discuss internal deliberations, say they will also have standard-bearers in the other 52 Ontario ridings they do not hold by next March.

But the first priority is to ensure incumbents, who are not being challenged for their nominations, are ready to go.

That has triggered speculation at Queen’s Park that Premier Doug Ford may call an election before the scheduled June 2, 2022 vote.

10:18 a.m. (will be updated) Ontario is reporting another 409 cases of COVID-19. Locally, there are 204 new cases in Toronto with 66 in Peel and 40 in Ottawa. Sixty-five per cent of Friday’s’s cases are in people under the age of 40. More than 41,800 tests were completed.

9:46 a.m. Kingston Frontenac Lennox & Addington (KFL&A) Public Health has confirmed that they have successfully secured additional doses of the influenza vaccine for the region this year.

Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore announced in June that Public Health had appealed to the province for more doses of the flu shot. He said that the region would need to “prepare for the worst” if the request didn’t come through.

Influenza typically causes a 10 to 15 per cent admission pattern in KFL&A area hospitals, Dr. Moore noted, as well as a 20 to 30 per cent increase in emergency department visits. COVID-19 and the flu also present similarly, particularly in adult patients, meaning a high flu prevalence could strain local COVID-19 testing capacity, as people try to distinguish the ailments.

By inoculating more people against influenza, Public Health hopes to reduce the overall strain it typically exerts on the health care system, and spare resources for managing COVID-19.

The Ontario government appears to be applying the same logic. On Tuesday, the province’s Health Minister Christine Elliot unveiled details of a fall pandemic response plan. The first of six “pillars” in the plan is aggressive flu vaccination.

“The Ontario government is implementing the largest flu immunization campaign in Ontario’s history,” the government announced. “The campaign is part of the province’s comprehensive plan to prepare the health system for a second wave of COVID-19.”

8:44 a.m. With only one week separating the end of one and the start of the other, the Tour de France and the French Open were shaping up as a double bill of sports entertainment, with masked but nevertheless live crowds, that would bear out President Emmanuel Macron’s arguments that the country can live with the coronavirus. The virus, however, had different ideas.

Whereas the three-week Tour reached Paris last Sunday having pulled off the coup of getting through the country’s worsening epidemic without any virus positives among its 176 riders, the French Open isn’t proving so lucky with its timing. Play is still scheduled to start Sunday, but organizers’ plans to have thousands of spectators there each day to cheer for Rafael Nadal, Serena Williams and others are being drastically scaled back as infections soar across France.

Last Sunday, tournament director Guy Forget had appeared in upbeat mood on French TV with the exhausted-looking Tour director, who tested positive himself during the race and hadn’t been sure it would get to Paris. Forget congratulated him for the cycling roadshow that drew smaller but still sizable and enthusiastic crowds, and looked forward to welcoming 5,000 spectators per day at Roland Garros. Although postponed from their usual slots in June and July both events decided not to cancel, unlike many others as the virus spread across the globe.

“Thanks to the Tour, thanks to tennis, sports are resuming again,” Forget said. “We want to experience beautiful emotions.

“If it’s 5,000 spectators, that’s better than nothing,” he added. “We see the glass half full.”

Less so now.

On Thursday, hours after the tennis tournament carried out a socially-distanced electronic draw, with no players present, France’s prime minister announced that new crowd-size limits introduced this week in Paris and other cities would also apply to Roland Garros. His office confirmed Friday that only 1,000 spectators will be allowed each day. Three weeks ago, the tournament had still been planning for 11,500, divided between its Philippe Chatrier, Suzanne Lenglen and Simonne Mathieu arenas. That was then cut last week to 5,000 and now to 1,000.

8:24 a.m. The Tokyo Olympic organizing committee and the International Olympic Committee agreed to cut costs by simplifying next year’s games in 52 areas, including staffing and events.

The number of staff and stakeholders will be reduced by 10-15 per cent, Tokyo 2020 President Yoshiro Mori said in a press conference Friday, following a two-day meeting with IOC executives on how to simplify the postponed games. Some events including opening ceremonies, as well as services such as food and transportation, will be scaled back.

“The opening ceremonies need to be inspirational, but not too festive,” Tokyo 2020 Chief Executive Officer Toshiro Muto said in the same briefing. “We are starting to modify the details.”

The local sponsors of the Tokyo games have yet to extend their contracts, which are set to expire in December, Muto said. The total amount that will be saved from the simplification has yet to be estimated, as has the limitation to the number of spectators, he said.

IOC member John Coates, who also joined the briefing via teleconference, said he isn’t concerned about the athletes’ qualification process as the federations are managing it well.

Originally scheduled for this summer, the event was postponed by a year in March due to the coronavirus pandemic that has killed almost 1 million people worldwide. Organizers had earlier said they were considering cost-cuts in more than 200 areas.

6:46 a.m. Tottenham received a bye Friday to advance to a League Cup meeting with Chelsea after its game against Leyton Orient was called off due to a coronavirus outbreak at the fourth-tier team.

Tottenham will now host Chelsea on Tuesday in the fourth round in a run of three home games in three different competitions across five days. Jose Mourinho’s side plays Newcastle in the Premier League on Sunday and Maccabi Haifa in Europa League qualifying on Thursday.

Orient’s League Two game on Saturday against Walsall has also been called off due to members of the squad having to self-isolate.

The east London club had hoped to rearrange the match against Tottenham after it was called off hours before Tuesday’s kickoff. League Cup organizers decided that it “was unable to fulfil its obligations to complete the fixture … and shall therefore forfeit the tie.”

6:18 a.m. Cyprus is ramping up coronavirus testing for soccer players and shutting down smaller stadium locker rooms following the emergence of large clusters of COVID-19 infections at two first division teams.

Officials from the health ministry and the Cypriot soccer federation have decided to carry out random coronavirus tests on five people from each of 20 teams from all divisions every week. Another 7,000 tests will be carried out on players from all divisions except the first division.

All stadium locker rooms smaller than a certain size will be closed and health officials will start inspections of all soccer stadiums and team installations to ensure health protocols are followed.

Any player who tests positive for COVID-19 is immediately placed in isolation under the existing protocols. Players who test negative within 24 hours of a confirmed case will be allowed to return to practice and take part in scheduled matches.

Cypriot clubs Nea Salamina and Ethnikos Achnas recently saw a spike in coronavirus infections.

5:54 a.m. Angry restaurant and bar owners are demonstrating in Marseille to challenge a French government order to close all public venues as of Saturday to battle resurgent virus infections.

The protesters, and local officials in France’s second-biggest city, are also threatening legal action, to try to block the order via the courts. They argue that Marseille’s virus case rise has been stabilizing, and that the central government in Paris is unfairly singling out Marseille for the toughest virus measures in the nation.

The government argues that hospitals in this Mediterranean city are under strain and the closures are the only way to stem the spread while avoiding new lockdowns. The French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe is under similar orders.

The central government also ordered less severe new restrictions for a dozen other cities, including Paris, where infections and hospitalizations are growing but the rate of infection per 100,000 people is lower than Marseille or Guadeloupe.

On Thursday France reported more than 16,000 new infections, and more than 10% of intensive care beds nationwide are now occupied by COVID-19 patients. France has reported 31,511 virus-related deaths, among the highest tolls in Europe.

4 a.m. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will join Canada’s top public health officers Friday for their daily update on the worsening COVID-19 health crisis.

Trudeau is expected to have an announcement about his government’s ongoing efforts to protect Canadians and combat the potentially deadly novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

But he’s also expected to start joining chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam and her deputy, Howard Njoo, more regularly at their daily briefings — a sign of how serious the second wave of COVID-19 has already become.

During the first wave last spring, Trudeau held daily news conferences outside his home, Rideau Cottage, but those tailed off and finally stopped as the pandemic went into a bit of a lull over the summer.

The coronavirus is now back, with caseloads spiking dramatically in the four largest provinces over the past few weeks.

4 a.m. Some Ontario pharmacies will begin offering COVID-19 tests Friday as the province tries to ease the burden on busy assessment centres.

Up to 60 pharmacies are offering the appointment-only tests to certain asymptomatic individuals, such as those with loved ones in long-term care homes, close contacts of a case or high-risk workers.

Meanwhile, the government announced yesterday that the province’s assessment centres will now focus on testing those with symptoms, exposure to a case and people involved in outbreak investigations.

Premier Doug Ford had previously said anyone who wanted a test could get one at an assessment centre but changed that message yesterday.

That means some people with no symptoms who are simply seeking reassurance they don’t have the virus will not be able to access testing offered by the province.

Ford is also expected to announce another part of the province’s fall pandemic preparedness plan Friday.

4 a.m. Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole says he’s urging his MPs to be hypervigilant amid concerns they could bring COVID-19 from Ottawa back to their ridings.

But he won’t stop them from using the same private testing clinic he did after he was turned away from a public facility in Ottawa that was over capacity. “Well, what I’m actually going to do is try and get (Prime Minister Justin) Trudeau off his duff to get some tests so that people can do in their home like they can in most G7 countries,” O’Toole said in a telephone interview with The Canadian Press.

O’Toole is nearing his final days in isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 last week. He first sought testing at a public site last Wednesday, but after several hours in line, was turned away.

A call to the public health office for MPs directed him to a clinic and he went the next day without realizing it was a fully private establishment set up for MPs, he said.

He had thought he was going directly to the same kind of private laboratory used for medical testing by many Canadians.

“So should there be a special clinic where people get superior access? No,” he said.

Thursday 5:36 p.m.: Ontario’s regional health units are reporting the second consecutive day with slightly slower COVID-19 growth than recent days, according to the Star’s latest count.

As of 5 p.m. Thursday, the health units were reporting another 416 new confirmed or probable cases, slightly below a trend that has seen the rate of new infections grow at an accelerating pace since early August.

The province’s seven-day average for new cases is now at 414 new cases daily, slightly more than double what the health units were reporting 11 days ago on Sept. 13. Earlier this week, that average had been on a pace to double about every nine days.

Ontario last saw such rapid exponential growth before the pandemic’s first peak in the spring. Although Ontario is still well below that peak level — about 600 infections a day, reported in late April — the current rate of case growth, if sustained, would see the average eclipse that rate by early October.

Thursday saw significant case totals reported across the province: Toronto reported 191 new cases, it’s most since early June; Ottawa reported 82; York Region added 35; Waterloo Region 18; Durham Region 17 and Halton Region 16.

Peel Region meanwhile reported a relatively low 23 new cases, its lowest 24-hour total this month. (The health unit has averaged 79 cases a day over the last seven days)

The province has now seen a total of 50,810 confirmed or probable cases of COVID-19, including 2,876 deaths.

No new fatal cases were reported in the last 24 hours.

The vast majority of the province’s COVID-19 patients have since recovered, and the recent rise in cases has not yet resulted in an equivalent jump in hospitalizations or deaths. That’s in part because the recent increase has not yet hit the vulnerable outbreak settings — like long-term-care homes — . Rates of hospitalization and death have also tended to lag behind weeks behind case jumps.

The province lists 3,774 active cases of the disease, a number that has been rising in recent weeks.

The Star’s count includes some patients reported as “probable” COVID-19 cases, meaning they have symptoms and contacts or travel history that indicate , but have not yet received a positive lab test.

The province cautions its separate data, published daily at 10:30 a.m., may be , saying that in the event of a discrepancy, “data reported by (the health units) should be considered the most up to date.”

‘Waste of resources.’ More than 150 no-shows each day at COVID testing sites in Waterloo

WATERLOO REGION — More than 150 people booking tests aren’t showing up for their appointments because they are double booking and taking the slot that gets them in the earliest.

At Grand River Hospital’s testing site on Glasgow Street, there are more than 100 no-shows each day, said hospital spokesperson Cheryl Evans.

Every morning at 7 a.m., there are 550 appointments available which are posted online on a first-come, first-serve basis. By 7:30 a.m. all the spots are usually filled.

But during the past nine days, on average, only 449 swabs have been done. On Saturday, only 376 people showed up even though all 550 spots were filled.

“We understand people want peace of mind but it does reduce access to testing for others that need it,” Evans said.

Testing site providers say people not showing up and not having the courtesy of cancelling is “a waste of resources.”

“People are shopping around,” said Rex Mohamed, owner of the Kitchener-Waterloo-Wilmot-Wellesley-Woolwich (KW4) Community Assessment Centre on Westmount Road North in Waterloo.

Mohamed said when his clinic opens at 9 a.m. there are up to 80 people waiting on hold to speak to an operator to book an appointment.

“At 9 a.m. it’s a zoo,” he said.

Many are on hold with other local testing sites at the same time and simultaneously booking elsewhere, Mohamed said.

The clinic is seeing up to 40 no-shows a day.

“It’s a waste of resources” with nurses and doctors waiting around, he said.

Local clinics began to see a testing frenzy after schools opened last month and more people needed to be tested.

The Doug Ford government announced that all COVID testing must be arranged by appointment only after many centres were seeing hours-long waits.

The drive-thru testing centre for Grand River Hospital was closed one day last month after people began lining up at 3 a.m. and some people became impatient, directing threats and verbal abuse at staff.

As a measure to reduce wait times, the province said some pharmacies could test people who were asymptomatic. In Waterloo Region, three Shoppers Drug Marts offer testing.

Testing sites for St. Mary’s General Hospital and Cambridge Memorial Hospital are also seeing no-shows but in smaller numbers.

Rita Sharratt, director of Cambridge’s testing centre, said of the 180 appointments available a day, there are up to 10 no-shows.

For now, residents must call to book an appointment. They will not be put on hold. Instead, they must keep calling back.

Soon, an online booking system will be set up and the testing centre will be moving to a location on Holiday Inn Drive, she said.

At the St. Mary’s centre, about 200 appointments are available daily. Some residents do not show up. For now, appointments can only be made on the phone but the system will be available online shortly, said hospital spokesperson Anne Kelly.

The province asks residents who seek testing at assessment centres to only do so if they are showing symptoms, if they have been exposed to a confirmed case or need a test to return to school or daycare, if they work in a setting that has had an outbreak, if they require testing to visit a long-term care home or for international travel.

Liz Monteiro is a Waterloo Region-based general assignment reporter for The Record. Reach her via email: With files from Laura Booth, Record staff

SIU drops case of woman arrested by OPP at Elmvale Zoo

Ontario’s police watchdog has closed an investigation because it could not prove there were any serious injuries to a 24-year-old woman when she was arrested at Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre on July 25.

“The medical records do not establish that the woman suffered any serious injury within the SIU’s mandate,” Special Investigations Unit (SIU) director Joseph Martino said a media release. “Regrettably, while the SIU made repeated efforts to secure further medical records from the woman regarding additional assessment in the days after the incident, she has not provided those releases.”

The woman was initially arrested at the Elmvale Jungle Zoo in Phelpston for an alleged assault.

OPP officers took her the Barrie hospital for a mental-health assessment after she made comments suggesting suicide.

At the hospital, the woman allegedly became violent toward the officers and was arrested and charged again.

‘The core to how the city runs itself’: Why you need to get involved in Barrie’s Official Plan process

Want to keep a highrise apartment building out of your well-established, low-density neighbourhood? Or get council to focus on improvements to the city’s transportation and cycling networks?

Many of the municipal government’s key decisions are based around the rules, regulations and rationale set out in the (OP). This is council’s overarching guiding document, telling members where everything from subdivisions and employment zones to environmentally-sensitive land and public parks should be. It helps determine how much waterfront space should be left in public hands and targets areas — such as the downtown, Essa Road corridor, properties surrounding the city’s two GO Transit stations and the former annexed lands in the south-end — for substantial development in the coming years.

And if something is excluded from the OP, residents and developers alike often have multi-year battles in front of them to get pet projects on council’s radar.

Bill Scott learned that lesson about a decade ago. The past chair of the Allandale Neighbourhood Association recalls helping meticulously sculpt a city-authorized historic neighbourhoods strategy over the span of about two years. Council approved the strategy.

But nearly a year later, when he tried to use the document in an argument against a proposed development, the city told him his claims were irrelevant because the strategy’s recommendations were never added to the OP.

“They said it’s not in the (OP), so we don’t have to pay attention to it,” he said. “We worked so hard to get council to approve the strategy, we didn’t realize we should’ve then got them to amend the (OP). Until that happens, it’s got no impact. The (OP) is really the core to how the city runs itself. There are a lot of time bombs in it. I’ve never actually read it all the way through, but you’ve got to watch it; there’s all kinds of things in there nobody knows about.”

The city’s current OP was approved by Ontario’s Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing in 2010. It’s run its course, given the municipality is now projecting a population of 298,000 people, and 150,000 jobs, by 2051.

So staff have developed a draft OP and urban design guidelines and they’re seeking public feedback until Dec. 22.

“The draft (OP) responds to the vision of the future that residents, businesses and council want to see based on feedback we heard from the many community engagement activities that have taken place over the past two years,” city development services director Michelle Banfield said. “A mix of land uses is being encouraged across the city to strive for more walkable, compact and complete communities. The OP is not all about development and growth for people and jobs. There are policies about our waterfront and green spaces, as well as mobility matters and how to move around the city. Everything in people’s day-to-day lives are impacted by the (OP) and the policies within. This is a chance for people to proactively think about urban planning and design in their community. Now is the time for residents and businesses to help shape the policy.”

The urban design rules set out the aesthetics for neighbourhoods within the city. Basically, it details how new buildings and reconstruction projects have to fit in with their surroundings.

OPs are highly technical and hundreds of pages long. Indeed, it may seem as if you need a planning background or years of government experience to slog through some of the minutiae. 

“Boy, there’s a lot of reading,” Scott said. “You have to struggle through it and keep asking yourself what this really means. The trouble is, none of us have time to do the whole story. You can’t have a glance at it.”

But, if you have “aspirations” for your community and the city as a whole, this is the best time to share that vision, Mayor Jeff Lehman said.

“Ultimately, an (OP) is an expression of a community’s vision for its own future,” he said. “That’s what it should be. We want to be more of an employment centre. We don’t want some of the challenges that come with being a big city to take over. We want a transportation system that will get us around. Making sure that happens is about proper long-term planning.”

There have been about 700 downloads of the draft OP document to date, Banfield said. 

Following the consultation period, staff will make necessary updates. An open house and public meeting is scheduled for spring. The documents could be adopted by council in about one year.

For more information, or to provide input on the documents, visit .


STORY BEHIND THE STORY: The city’s draft OP and growth strategies have been discussed around the council table recently. Simcoe.com decided to take a deeper look to help residents understand the effect this weighty document has on their everyday lives.

‘Just keep it up folks’: Ford backs ‘surgical approach’ to future COVID-19 lockdowns during Barrie visit

Premier Doug Ford patted Simcoe County residents on the back Oct. 26 for helping keep COVID-19 cases here from getting out of control.

“I give credit to the mayors and our MPPs, but it’s the people. The people here are following protocols. They are doing great. Just keep it up, folks. You’re doing great,” Ford said.

The Simcoe-Muskoka District Health Unit reported more than 450 COVID-19 cases in October, a monthly record for the region.

Ford was at Napoleon, a Barrie fireplace and barbecue manufacturer, to announce the creation of a Made in Ontario campaign when he made the comment.

Simcoe County remains in Stage 3, which allows modified opening for nearly all businesses, while York Region to the south was forced to revert to Stage 2 when its positive cases started to climb.

Ford told reporters during his daily media briefing that he prefers a “surgical approach” when considering future shutdowns.

“I’m a business guy. I can’t stand closing any businesses with these poor folks trying to keep their heads above water,” he said. “I want to take more of a surgical approach and not paint a broad brush across an industry, no matter if it’s gyms or restaurants. We gotta help these people out.”

Ford applauded Ontario’s manufacturing sector for its resilience during the pandemic, saying 51,700 new jobs last month pushed manufacturing employment above pre-COVID levels by 17,000 positions. 

“As local manufacturers have proven time and time again during this pandemic, they can make anything,” he said.

Napoleon, which sells gas fireplaces, barbecues, and heating and cooling systems, increased its workforce, now boasting 1,100 employees provincewide.

“With a new way of doing things, we quickly returned to highly productive levels while ensuring safety,” co-CEO Chris Schroeter said. “We have had unprecedented demand for our in-home products. To keep up, we’ve hired 200 more full-time employees since June.”

Ford pointed to the Barrie-Innisfil area as a great place to live, urging anyone hoping to move out of the city to consider the area.

“Things are booming here in Barrie and Innisifl. They really are,” he said, urging local municipal politicians to fast-track new housing development.

Midland’s Georgian Bay General Hospital addressing surgery backlog created by COVID-19 shutdown

The surgical department at Georgian Bay General Hospital is back and operating at full capacity.

Dr. Vikram Ralhan, chief of staff at GBGH, said he hopes the return to 100 per cent will allow them to eliminate the backlog of surgeries and procedures that accumulated during the spring shutdown.

“There is still a bit of a backlog that we are working to catch up on. We are finding creative solutions to increase the number of cases we can do,” said Ralhan.

Elective surgeries and procedures resumed at the Midland hospital in mid-June. However, GBGH was only authorized to schedule the operating room at half its normal capacity.

In early November, the hospital was authorized to return to 100 per cent capacity, doubling the number of surgeries and procedures it can do.

“We are working collaboratively with our surgeons, nurses and hospital leaders to figure out what the best approach is to be able to address the backlog,” said Ralhan.

One of the challenges the hospital faces is working around the increased downtime between surgeries and procedures. That time has to be maintained in order to allow for proper cleaning and sanitization.

According to Ralhan, staff are discussing the possibility of extending the hours of the operating room to allow for more surgeries to be completed in a day, and possibly creating an endoscopy day on Saturdays to tackle that specific waiting list. 

They are also working on continuing to expand the GBGH surgical program.

Prior to the pandemic, GBGH opened up a second operating room two days a week, in addition to the primary operating room. 

“We are continuing to do that. We have a second OR open,” said Ralhan. “As long as there isn’t a ministry mandate to ramp down again, our hope is that we can continue on with our optimization and expansion plans.”

Increased COVID-19 case counts are forcing the hospital to reassess protocols. While it currently isn’t mandatory for surgical patients to receive a COVID-19 test prior to their procedure, that may change.

“We are evaluating that,” said Ralhan. “It’s a constant moving target; as case counts change, requirements change.”