Tag: 上海龙凤个人自荐

Confused on COVID rules? You’re not alone

Rising cases — an average of more than 1,400 new cases daily over the past week — forced the Ontario government to make a tighter grip on restrictions this week. Toronto and Peel Region are now on lockdown, meaning the closure of non-essential businesses and strict limits on gatherings.

But that kind of clear communication has been more exception than rule. The Ontario government (among other governments) has been criticized for its confusing, and at times, contradictory messaging and policies on COVID restrictions. The Toronto Star has reported on how the Ontario government has of its own public health doctors, how Toronto Public Health officials have had to sign and how for Canadians.

The news has led to a confusing and frustrating time for many who want clear guidance on what behaviours and activities are safest.

Roxanne Khamsi, science journalist and contributor to WIRED Magazine, joins This Matters to talk about the muddied waters of public health messaging and why that makes controlling COVID in the second wave that much harder.

Listen to this episode and more at or subscribe at , , or wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts.

Police seize cocaine, loaded handgun during early morning raid at Springwater home

Police seized $75,000 in drugs and a loaded handgun after officers searched a Springwater home Oct. 29.

Huronia West OPP officers executed an early morning search warrant in connection with an ongoing investigation.

About 500 grams of cocaine and 7,000 Percocet pills were found in the house along with a “large” amount of cash.

Three Springwater Township men and two Barrie women, all in their 20s, are charged with numerous firearm and drug trafficking offences. 

The three male suspects were held for bail court in Barrie.  

Police said no foul play involved in the drowning death of missing Bradford teen, Siem Zerezghi

South Simcoe Police have confirmed the body found in a pond Oct. 30 was Siem Zerezghi, the missing teenager from Bradford. 

Siem’s death was due to drowning, Chief Andrew Fletcher said at a news conference held at the Bradford Leisure Centre at 471 West Park Ave. Nov. 2. 

“This was not the ending we had hoped for,” Fletcher said.

Siem was missing since Oct. 24, and was last seen at around 7:45 a.m. in his neighbourhood in the area of Professor Day and Northgate drives. 

During a “large scale” search that involved SSP’s ATVs and drone, and policing partners including York Regional and Ontario Provincial police, searchers found some of Siem’s items near a pond about 100 m away from his home at 8th Line and Professor Day. 

“Every possible resource was utilized for this investigation,” Fletcher said. 

Fletcher said Siem’s jacket and one of his flip flops were found in mud on the bank near the pond. 

OPP Marine Unit was called in to search the pond and found Siem’s body. 

Following an autopsy, police said there is no foul play involved in Siem’s death. 

Fletcher said he doesn’t believe Siem knew how to swim.

The reason for Siem going to the pond that day is still under investigation. Police said they know Siem would often walk to his aunt’s house nearby, but he did not go there the day he went missing. 

“We haven’t been able to determine why he left that morning,” Fletcher said. 

Siem was a very private, quiet person who did not tell people about his plans, Fletcher said.

That morning, Siem’s father was at work. 

Based on the information police have, they are unable to determine his movements the day he went missing, Fletcher said, adding the investigation continues as they try to obtain more video footage. 

Many members of the community who took to Facebook wrote their concerns, questioning why an Amber Alert was not issued the day of Siem’s disappearance. 

Fletcher said they were not permitted to use an Amber Alert, which is only used for people who go “missing in suspicious circumstances early on in the investigation and it’s usually in the case where we have an abduction or a child removed from a home, we have a vehicle or a person, we have something to go on. That was not the criteria for this investigation.”

Fletcher said his team and policing partners involved in the search for Siem will be grieving the outcome, but are “thankful” to have found his body, as it provides the family and investigators with some closure. 

Bradford West Gwillimbury Mayor Rob Keffer also attended the news conference and said the support from the community was “heartwarming”. 

“This certainly isn’t the outcome we were wanting but we are here to support one another, Siem’s loved ones and family get through this very trying time,” Keffer said. 

“I am very proud of my community for the support they have showed.”

On Nov. 1, the community gathered at the library and held a candlelit walk in Siem’s memory. Siem’s family also attended. The walk was organized by a member of the community. 

A , also created by a member of the community, was created to support the family. More than $30,000 has been raised so far. 

On Oct. 29, .

“Please Siem, your family loves you, miss you. Please come home, Siem,” his eldest sister, Ruta, 21, said.

Siem also had a twin sister. 

The family and community were hopeful for Siem’s return. Many stores across Bradford hung posters of him when he was missing. 

Police said the family is “understandably” devastated at this time, and ask for their privacy, while feeling grateful for the outpouring of support from the community. 

SSP asks anyone with information to contact the force at , or , or Crime Stoppers at . You can also submit information online at .

‘We would be in serious trouble’: Federal funding has helped Collingwood businesses stay afloat during COVID-19 pandemic

Guy Laporte and Craig Ashton are owners of the Craigleith Manor Bed and Breakfast.

For more than five years, they’ve aimed to make it a popular destination for tourists.

“We’re ranked as one of the top B&Bs in Canada,” Laporte said. “This makes this B&B a really busy place. It’s been absolutely fabulous for the last five-and-a-half years, until COVID smacked us.”

They closed their doors from March until July but when they reopened, they saw sales drop by 40 per cent. While August, September and October were on the upswing, rising COVID-19 cases have once again led to a downturn in business.

“We’re back now to no guests at all and it’s primarily because of what’s going on in Toronto,” Laporte said. 

It’s one of the reasons, Laporte and Ashton are thankful for the federal government’s Regional Relief and Recovery Fund, which provides businesses with loans to keep them afloat.

“Like any small business that has no revenue from sales, you still have ongoing expenses,” Laporte said. “There’s no doubt, we would be in serious trouble. This is a small business that went into debt further so that we could stay alive. We’re just happy to have the lifeline.”

Gillian Fairley is general manager of the Centre for Business and Economic Development in Collingwood, which administers the program.

She said her office has helped more than 29 businesses secure much-needed funding.

“It was critical,” she said. “When they first launched the program, we were inundated with applications. It was very much needed, it’s still needed now.”

While some of the programs have specific requirements, Fairley said her office is able to help corporations and main street businesses.

“It’s really meant to address the gaps in funding for businesses who can’t access other programs,” she said. 

Black Bellows Brewing Company opened its brewery and restaurant in the heart of downtown Collingwood in January, just a few months before the pandemic. 

“The pandemic put a huge financial strain on the company when it hit in March,” said Bryn Davies, owner of Black Bellows. “The (funding) was instrumental in getting the company back on its feet, hiring back staff that we were forced to lay off when the pandemic hit, and pivoting the business in new directions.”

Laporte said they are a small boutique operation, who can have up to six guests. He is hopeful that ski season is somewhat normal but said the funding will ““allow us to stay here, to keep this business open, even with smaller numbers of guests, until the economy comes back up.”


Story behind the story: Many businesses in the tourist industry have struggled since the pandemic and we wanted to find out how they’ve been able to stay afloat and whether relief funding has helped.

 

‘Are people to be left to die?’ Canada pumps millions into COVID-19 vaccine-sharing effort, but fears persist for poorer nations

This story is part of an ongoing series — The Road to a Vaccine — that looks at Canada’s quest to secure a amid the global pandemic, as well as the hurdles and history it faces to do so.

As the race for a vaccine kicks into high gear, has announced that Canada will chip in $440 million to a global effort to share vaccines and make sure poorer countries aren’t left behind.

Trudeau told reporters Friday said the money for the COVAX Facility will be divided between the global procurement effort — which could mean as many as 15 million additional doses for Canadians — and the sharing program by which vaccines will be sent to countries that wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford them.

“To eliminate the virus anywhere, we need to eliminate the virus everywhere,” Trudeau said. “That’s why Canada is helping ensure vaccines are distributed quickly and fairly around the world.”

There are now more than 100 teams around the world at work on potential vaccines, known as vaccine candidates, a handful of which are moving into the final stages of clinical testing. But it’s a competition some say is at risk of being overshadowed by the nation-versus-nation battle for doses, as a weakened global response has spurred richer countries to seek out vaccine deals of their own.

COVAX is the major global attempt to try to avoid having all the vaccines go to the highest bidders.

Launched this spring by, among others, the World Health Organization and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Gavi alliance, it’s since emerged as the only real international effort to get countries to work together on both procuring, manufacturing and distributing vaccines. While Canada had officially signed on as of Monday, details of the financial commitment were unclear until now.

For a country such as Canada, which can afford to buy in, the benefits of the program are arguably twofold: Canada gets the option to share in any successful vaccines the group obtains access to, but is also able to support the sending of vaccines to poorer countries.

For countries that can’t afford vaccines any other way, it could be a lifeline.

The fear that countries with shallower pockets are going to be left out when the time comes was back in the spotlight this week at the UN Virtual Summit.

“Are people to be left to die?” asked Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, a COVID-19 survivor, referring to the problems that may lie ahead.

If all goes to plan, COVAX is aiming to deliver two billion vaccine doses by the end of 2021 to countries around the world, distributing them based on population and need rather than ability to pay.

But that goal is highly dependent on the money they have yet to get from donor countries and philanthropists.

Half of Canada’s financial commitment, or $220 million, will go to COVAX’s financial arm, known as the COVAX Advance Market Commitment, which is in charge of funding vaccines for low and middle-income countries. But it has yet to meet its initial $2-billion goal, raising questions about who will be left out if the needed money isn’t raised.

The program was dealt some early blows, when major players such as the U.S., China and India all declined to sign on, choosing instead to focus on their own vaccine needs.

The United States, for example, has dubbed its own vaccine effort Operation Warp Speed and poured an estimated $10 billion into it while making clear that the fruits of its labour will be for Americans only.

Canada hasn’t escaped accusations of selfishness either.

A public letter signed by more than 100 health and policy experts and released last week accuses the federal government of undercutting efforts such as COVAX by participating in the global jockeying for vaccines.

In fact, before announcing the COVAX funding, Trudeau revealed Canada’s latest advance purchase agreement, this time with a company called AstraZeneca, which has been working with Oxford University on a potential vaccine. Should it pass clinical trials, Canada will be able to acquire as many as 20 million doses.

Canada now has agreements with six different biopharmaceutical companies, in addition to any doses obtained through COVAX. If every vaccine candidate ends up successful (which is admittedly unlikely) and Canada buys the maximum number of doses to which it’s entitled through these contracts, it could end up with almost 300 million vaccine doses.

What happens when COVAX bumps up against all those advance purchase agreements remains murky.

Early on in the pandemic, Canada got stung by a general lack of preparation when it came to acquiring personal protective equipment, notes Colin Furness, an infection-control epidemiologist and assistant professor at the University of Toronto.

Now, he says, the government is moving hard to make sure the same thing doesn’t happen with vaccines: “Aggressively negotiating and throwing around the fact that we’ve got a currency that has purchasing power and throwing out elbows (to) get in line, that’s an understandable thing to do,” he said.

“Though the consequences to those who are then behind us in line, I mean, ethically, that can get a little bit complicated.”

For Jason Nickerson, a humanitarian affairs adviser with Doctors Without Borders, the litmus test for whether it’s possible to have these purchase agreements without jettisoning global responsibilities will be whether or not health-care workers and people who are high risk are able to get vaccinated first and in a timely manner — no matter where they are in the world.

“I think the major concern is that vaccines are going to be delivered to high-income countries to use before they are delivered to low-income countries to vaccinate their high risk populations,” he said.

Karina Gould, Canada’s minister of international development, says that vaccine companies have already committed certain doses to COVAX, so it’s not a matter of Canada’s orders bumping them out of the queue. The exact delivery timelines are still under discussion.

“Canada’s position is that we expect vaccines to be affordable, accessible and equitable around the world,” she said.

And if it looks like funding will be falling short?

“Well, then, we’ll be on the phone, trying to encourage partners around the world to step up and to make a contribution. I know that we’re still waiting on announcements from some of significant players, and I’m confident that they’re going to deliver.”

Last spring, Canada assembled a group of experts on everything from public health to pharmaceuticals and charged them with advising the government on how to lock down a safe and effective vaccine as soon as possible.

But while members of this Vaccine Task Force maintain that their first job is to get a vaccine for Canadians, they believe in the need for global access, and for Canada to strike a balance between protecting its own while doing its part for the global community.

“We recognize that if the disease exists anywhere, it exists everywhere. So it’s also important, and our advice is around that, for Canada to support international global efforts,” says co-chair J. Mark Lievonen, who is also the former president of Sanofi Pasteur Ltd., the Canadian vaccine division of global biopharmaceutical company Sanofi.

How these vaccine deals start playing out is something that Nickerson, of Doctors Without Borders will be watching closely.

“If history is any indication of what can happen during a pandemic, I think that we ought to be concerned,” he said, nodding to the H1N1 pandemic, when a lot of the early vaccines, and only donated to other countries once their own needs were met.

In the same way that COVID has exposed the cracks in our education and health systems, he said that this pandemic risks underscoring how medication and health care are just easier to come by if you’re a richer country: “We need better systems of fair distribution and allocation, and pricing. It’s just not right.”

That said, he says COVAX, and Canada’s commitment, could be a meaningful step in the right direction.

“It’s clear that countries are striking these bilateral deals because they think that it’s the quickest way of gaining access, but there’s also a momentum behind COVAX that I don’t think that we’ve ever seen before,” he said.

“So if it’s properly funded, and if there is a fair, equitable allocation process, then I’m hopeful that this is the start of something good.”

With files from The Associated Press

Alex Boyd is a Calgary-based reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: .n.boyd

‘Immediately stop using’: Numerous well-known wipes products sold in Canada recalled due to infection fears

Health Canada has issued a large recall of numerous wipes products sold in Halton region and across Canada due to a possible contamination that could cause infections.

The involves Cottonelle & Cottonelle GentlePlus Flushable Wipes products. The company reported that more than 2 million units of the affected products were sold in Canada.

“Some of the recalled products may have the presence of a common household microorganism, Pluralibacter gergoviae,” Health Canada said in a statement. “Pluralibacter gergoviae rarely causes serious infections in healthy individuals. Individuals with weakened immune systems, who suffer from a serious pre-existing condition, who have been treated surgically, or belong to another sensitive group of persons are at an increased risk of infection if they use the contaminated product.”

The affected products were sold from February 14, 2020 to October 7, 2020, Health Canada said.

As of October 7, the company has received no reports of incidents or serious injuries in Canada.

“Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled product and dispose of it,” the Health Canada recall states, adding buyers should contact Kimberly-Clark (the distributor) for a refund and for information on disposal.

The affected products were sold at many stores, including Costco.

Here is one of the recalled products but there are others:

‘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