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Most Ontarians favour small Thanksgiving gatherings and oppose trick-or-treating due to COVID-19, poll says

Talking turkey and trick-or-treating will not be the same this year thanks to the , a new poll suggests.

The Campaign Research survey for the Star found most Ontarians favour small Thanksgiving gatherings this weekend and oppose the customary Halloween festivities on Oct. 31.

One third of those polled — 33 per cent — said only the people residing in a single household should celebrate Thanksgiving together.

Almost half — 48 per cent — said fewer than 10 people should gather for the traditional turkey dinner.

Ten per cent said Ontarians should be allowed to do whatever they want on the annual holiday while six per cent said between 10 and 25 people should be permitted to get together under one roof and three per cent had no opinion.

“There is a lot of noise out there, but the research suggests people are accepting what they have to do and accepting their own personal responsibility,” Campaign Research principal Nick Kouvalis said Sunday.

Campaign Research polled 1,017 people across Ontario last Wednesday through Friday using Maru/Blue’s online panel. It is an opt-in poll, but for comparison purposes, a random sample of this size would have a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The firm found 60 per cent were opposed to letting children canvas for candy on Halloween due to the risks of COVID-19.

Only 33 per cent favoured pandemic trick-or-treating and eight per cent had no opinion.

While Premier Doug Ford recommended small gatherings for Thanksgiving and has , the Ontario government is not restricting the two October celebrations.

“Really, what it comes down to is … use your best judgment. I’ve got a lot of calls, ‘Should I go see my 80-year-old mother for Thanksgiving?’ You have to use common sense, and that really comes down to your family members,” Ford said Monday.

“Do we want you to tighten the circle? One hundred per cent we want you to tighten it. Do we want you to stick within the same group that you’re always around, be it family members? Absolutely,” he said.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said “with Thanksgiving coming up next weekend … if you have any very vulnerable family members, people over the age of 70 or people that may have pre-existing conditions, you may not want to get together with them to protect their health and safety.”

At city hall, Dr. Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s medical officer of health, went further.

“Please do not hold a big ‪Thanksgiving dinner. Please limit your Thanksgiving dinner to the people you live with. If you live alone, your safest option is to join with others virtually,” said de Villa.

Kouvalis pointed out that “leaving aside government orders and recommendations from health officials, people are already telling us what they’re going to do.

“The research suggests the public doesn’t need the government to tell it what to do,” said the pollster, who has worked with Conservative and Liberal candidates across Canada and managed the winning Toronto mayoral campaigns of Rob Ford and John Tory.

“While there is a significant portion of the public that appears to want additional restrictions, they don’t need to be told.”

Some two-thirds of respondents — 67 per cent — agreed with the provincial government’s three-stage plan to reopen the economy with 30 per cent opposed and the rest unsure.

But with COVID-19 infections again on the rise, 62 per cent said they favoured a return to a modified Stage 2 where indoor restaurants and bars would be closed but schools would remain open.

About one-third — 31 per cent — opposed that and seven per cent had no opinion.

When Campaign Research asked about returning to Stage 2 with schools also being closed, support dropped to 53 per cent. More than one-third — 37 per cent — opposed that and nine per cent weren’t sure.

Kouvalis noted Ontarians appear to be wrestling with how things should proceed.

Campaign Research bored down and asked what is closer to Ontarians’ view today, with 39 per cent saying the province should remain in Stage 3 and 42 per cent wanting a more restrictive Stage 2 with restaurants, bars, gyms, banquet halls and schools closed for all indoor activity.

“That’s four out of 10 wanting things as they are and four out of 10 wanting to go back,” he said, adding 11 per cent wanted to go back to Stage 1 with government “stay home” orders and nine per cent weren’t sure.

“This is where the public is at. There’s a real split.”

Ontarians are also divided as to what the public health threshold should be for returning to Stage 2 as average new infections hover at around 600 a day.

About a quarter — 26 per cent — said the bar should be 500 to 600 new cases daily for a week while nine per cent said it should be 600 to 700 new cases and nine per cent said it should be 700 to 800. Three per cent said 800 to 900, four per cent said 900 to 1,000, and four per cent said more than 1,000.

But one third — 33 per cent — said the number of cases “doesn’t matter” as long as there are hospital beds available for those who have severe symptoms and need medical attention. Twelve per cent weren’t sure.

One issue that did not appear to be contentious was the wearing of masks to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

Fully 87 per cent agreed with the current provincial edict making it mandatory to wear a mask indoors in public places, such as school and shops, and on transit. Only 11 per cent were opposed with two per cent unsure.

Even outdoor mask-wearing was acceptable with 83 per cent favouring that while 15 per cent were opposed and two per cent had no opinion.

With files from David Rider

is the Star’s Queen’s Park bureau chief and a reporter covering Ontario politics. Follow him on Twitter:

Ten good news stories from Toronto Star headlines this week

We’ve got the goods for you.

From Halloween hijinks to Toronto dedicating a day to one of her native sons, we have compiled some of this week’s best good-news stories from thestar.com.

1.

We asked and you delivered! The Star put out a call for your photos of your creative costumes as you got ready to do your best to celebrate Halloween in 2020. And, boy, did you send us a pillowcase of fun!

2.

Dropping candy down a chute for little costumed Baby Sharks, Mulans and Black Panthers. Flinging full-size candybars to them via mini-catapults, “Game of Thrones” style, or with decorated slingshots. A favourite North American festivity is being tested by COVID-19. And people rose to the challenge for trick-or-treating that’s both safe and fun during a pandemic.

3.

An email from the Queen Mother Cafe proprietor Andre Rosenbaum, not sharing news of an impending closure, but instead its 42nd anniversary on Oct. 26, was comforting. At least for now one of the iconic spots that shaped people’s memories of Queen West is staying put.

4.

With more than a decade of screenwriting experience under his belt, the Canadian filmmaker behind comedies “This Is the End” and “Pineapple Express” is trying to expose youth from under-represented communities to the industry through Reel Start.

5.

Olufunke Asemota and her daughter lived in a shelter after arriving in Canada in December 2018. The single mother, originally from Nigeria, said she was a refugee claimant who didn’t know anyone in Canada and had no family to turn to for help.

But amid the “trauma (and) confusion,” she said, she met a friend who would introduce her to a training program that would turn her life around.

6.

It’s going to be a long winter, so we’re doing whatever it takes to add an extra dose of joy into daily life. Here are more things to make you happy. Hopefully they will bring you some joy too as we head into a week marking the start of daylight saving and the 2020 U.S. presidential election.

7.

After five years out of the TV spotlight, Jon Stewart will have his own show again.

Stewart, the former anchor of “The Daily Show,” has reached a deal to host a current-affairs series for Apple TV+, the company announced Tuesday.

8.

With love and pranks, Ian Paget and Chris Olsen are among millions of U.S. newbies looking to soak up social media stardom on TikTok. While they aren’t breakout stars like Nathan Apodaca (the guy with the cranberry juice and long board), they symbolize something else on TikTok. Their care for each other shines through for a range of supporters, from middle-age moms to LGBTQ youth struggling to come out.

9.

Mayor John Tory declared Saturday as “John Candy Day” to mark what would’ve been the actor’s 70th birthday. The mayor made the announcement on social media, saying, “It’s our way of remembering a beloved actor and comedian with roots in Toronto.”

10.

White rhinos are the second-largest land mammal and are an endangered species with a near-threatened status. The newborn’s birth on Sunday was a successful product of the Species Survival Plans overseen by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums to ensure the responsible breeding of endangered species.

Media organizations still waiting for rollout of key federal government support program

As the second of wave of COVID-19 , questions remain as to when a key federal government support for journalism will be rolled out.

The refundable journalism labour tax credit for media outlets was part of an aid package first unveiled by the Liberals in 2018, as the media landscape was getting smaller, newspaper editions were being cut and financially struggling outlets were shutting down for good.

The credit is calculated at a rate of 25 per cent of a newsroom employee’s salary, for a maximum credit of $13,750 per employee per tax year. Outlets eligible for the credit must first be designated a “qualified Canadian journalism organization” (QCJO) by an independent panel. The credit is retroactive to Jan. 1, 2019.

Despite being announced almost two years ago, it would appear the program has yet to start issuing payments for the credit for 2019.

Canadian Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault had said in May that the first eligible news organizations would learn if they qualify for the credit this past spring, and that payments would follow in the summer.

However, media advocacy organizations say they’re unaware of any outlet having yet received a payment. The groups also say it’s unclear just how many outlets have received the QCJO designation.

Criteria that an outlet must meet for the designation includes being a corporation, partnership or trust operating in Canada, engaged in the production of original news content and which employs at least two journalists.

Guilbeault’s office referred questions about the tax credit this week to the Canada Revenue Agency, which told the Star in a statement that QCJO designations are now being issued, but that provisions in the Income Tax Act prevent the agency from disclosing who has applied for, received, or been denied a designation.

The agency did not respond to questions as to when the panel actually started approving QCJO designations, or when payments would be issued.

“While we’re seeing things being cut to the bone — and there’s very much a sword of Damocles hanging over the industry right now — we’re trying to figure out what the best course of action is, because we don’t have a lot of details at this point, from the government, and from others,” said Brent Jolly, president of the Canadian Association of Journalists.

“Sometimes I worry that it’s paralysis by analysis…That at the end of the day, it’s ultimately journalists and the public’s right to know that are the ones most compromised by the lack of action.”

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the problems of an industry, particularly newspapers, that has struggled for years with declining advertising revenues, while at the same time media outlets are being relied on more than ever by the public.

Since the first wave of the pandemic hit in March, 24 community newspapers have ceased publication, while about two dozen more are temporarily closed, said April Lindgren, a journalism professor at Ryerson University. Two private radio stations have stopped operating and 11 daily newspapers have cut one or more of their print editions, she said.

Lindgren is the principal investigator with the Local News Research Project, which collects data for the COVID-19 Media Impact Map for Canada, along with online trade publication J-Source and the Canadian Association of Journalists.

“Yet again we’re seeing local media in particular being in trouble at a time when never before has their role in informing the public about what are essentially life-and-death situations been so important,” she said.

“That’s why it’s so disturbing because you won’t find out about what’s happening in the intensive care unit of your local hospital by watching a national news report. You need local media to make those calls and ask those questions.

“To give people that information so they can make informed decisions about whether they want to send their kids to in-person classes or study online, or whether their elderly relatives are going to be OK in local nursing homes.”

At least for this year, media organizations, along with many other businesses across the country, have been able to tap into the federal government’s emergency wage subsidy, brought in due to COVID-19 to help cover a portion of workers’ wages.

(Torstar, the parent company of the Toronto Star, is among the recipients of the subsidy.)

“It’s been the lifeline for many newspapers across the country this year,” said Bob Cox, chair of the Canadian News Media Association.

Guilbeault’s office highlighted in a statement to the Star on Friday that the government had also brought in a one-time $45-million special measures program due to COVID-19 to help digital, small circulation and free magazines and community newspapers.

While grateful for the wage subsidy and other one-time supports, Cox said media organizations would like clear timelines from the government regarding the journalism labour tax credit.

“Here is our biggest fear: It’s that next year we are going to go forward and we’re not going to have wage subsidies, and we’re not going to have special measures, and the kind of support we got this year for COVID,” he said. “And we need (the tax credit) working by then so that we can go back to something approaching normal.”

Guilbeault is also continuing to monitor work in Australia and France around possible measures to make digital giants like Facebook and Google pay media outlets for using their content, his office said Friday. The minister discussed the issue with his French and Australian counterparts this week, and is considering options for a made-in-Canada framework.

Jacques Gallant is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: