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‘Don’t let your guard down’: Collingwood OPP says stay vigilant as scammers increase activity during COVID-19

Whether it’s telephone messages claiming to represent the CRA or a young person claiming to be a grandchild, fraudsters are continuing to try and scam people out of their money.

“This is still happening,” said OPP Cons. Martin Hachey. “Even though COVID has happened and a lot of things have changed, this hasn’t changed. Be aware, don’t let your guard down.”

Hachey said there are a host of scams ongoing that have fraudsters looking for victims.

The Prize Scam is one, where a prize has been won however ‘fees’ need to be paid for administration, shipping or for brokerage purposes. 

The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) scam is another, where a caller advises the intended victim that they owe taxes to the CRA and must pay immediately via gift cards or cryptocurrency or face jail time.

The Tech Support scam sees the victim receive a warning that a virus has infected their computer and the scammer needs access to fix the problem. Then, they hack the computer, encrypt the hard drive and demand money, before releasing the files.

The Emergency or Grand Parent Scam sees the fraudster claiming to be a loved one who needs money to help them as they were involved in a crash, have been arrested, or need to return from a foreign country. 

Also, a romance scam recently saw a .

Hachey said residents should never give out personal information of any kind, including banking information, credit-card numbers or social-insurance numbers.

“They are very good at what they do,” he said. “Everything is a lie and that’s where tracking it is very difficult.”

The Canadian Anti-Fraud centre said the pandemic has led to more activity among scammers.

“Many Canadians are spending more time at home,” said Lisanne Roy Beauchamp, operations supervisor for the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre. “As a result, fraudsters have upped their attempts to contact potential victims by phone and online. A correlation can be made between Covid-19 frauds and overall reporting to date in 2020; however, we have noted peaks and valleys in reporting over the past five years.”

Long-lost First World War medal returns to Midland from Nova Scotia

A First World War medal, discovered in the back of a 1950s-era Chevrolet in Halfway River, Nova Scotia, has been successfully returned to a family in Midland.

The 1914-18 service medal, belonging to Private Nelson Hampden Bell, was presented to Jeff Bell — his closest living relative — in Midland on Nov. 2. 

“This is one of those lost and found stories that we are delighted to say has a happy ending,” said Daniel Travers, Sgt-at-Arms at the Midland Legion.

In September, Travers received an email from Keith Odlin, the service officer and museum curator at Legion Branch 45 in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia, notifying him of the medal. 

Charles Davison, a farmer in Halfway River, discovered the medal in the back of an old Chevrolet truck he was restoring when he removed the rear seats. Davison contacted the Parrsboro Legion for assistance in tracking down its rightful owner.

All First World War medals are inscribed with the names of the soldiers receiving them. Odlin was able to see that the medal belonged to infantryman Private N.H. Bell. He searched online records and discovered that Bell’s next of kin, Mary Bell, had a Midland P.O. box listed as her address.

Odlin contacted Travers, who enlisted the help of Legion volunteer Rob Thorpe, and Huronia Museum curator Genevieve Carter, to help track down Bell’s closest living relative.

Through research, they discovered that Bell was a Midland resident during the war and that he is currently buried at Lakeview Cemetery. Thorpe used burial records from the cemetery to track down the name of the individual who paid for the burial, which led them to Bell’s sister. Carter then sifted through extensive genealogy records to find Bell’s closest living relative — Jeff Bell.

Once they knew who the medal belonged to, Odlin mailed the medal from Parrsboro to Midland.

“This was an exciting collaboration between both legion branches and the Huronia Museum,” said Travers. “With hundreds of thousands of these medals presented to Canadian soldiers during and after the war, finding its rightful owner was, by no means, certain. We are so pleased that the medal is where it rightfully belongs.”

Bruce Arthur: Doug Ford gives up on Halloween, and even epidemiologists say this message will haunt us

Time to egg Queen’s Park. Ontarians could TP it, but we can’t risk toilet paper shortages again. If we can learn lessons from this pandemic, we should.

But now that Ontario in the province’s four COVID-19 hot zones — Toronto, Ottawa, Peel and York — we should consider why that decision is being taken, and what we haven’t learned.

“I understand the intention, and I don’t think there are more people more concerned about the epidemiological situation than I am,” says Dr. Andrew Morris, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Toronto, and the medical director of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at Sinai-University Health Network. “But there is no reason why this cannot be done in a safe manner.”

Living life safely and as normally as possible is, even , the goal of public health. For months we have been told to get outdoors, maintain social distance, stick to our immediate family units in serious situations such as this one, and wear masks.

Which sounds a hell of a lot like Halloween.

“It’s like the worst PR moves you can possibly construe for a public health movement that is suffering badly to maintain public confidence,” says Dr. Abdu Sharkawy, an infectious disease specialist and ICU doctor at Toronto Western Hospital. “I’m sure what they’re thinking is we’ll be the stewards of caution, we’ll be extra-safe … I look at it from the point of view that you’ve given people a lot of poor messaging, you didn’t exercise restraint when you needed to, and now you’re taking away something that multiple experts deem safe.”

It’s not the end of the world, but it’s a mess. Ontario didn’t close strip clubs until Sept. 25, opened the casinos on Sept. 28, left spin classes open until after the Hamilton super-spreader event, and has agonized over and waited too long to close businesses even when it’s clear they can be venues of transmission. Heck, it just reopened indoor dance studios.

Oh, and our kids are still jammed in schools. Dr. Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s medical officer of health, said schools did not appear to be significantly contributing to community spread. So why would Halloween? We should be able to make this safe.

“If you think about risk and risk reduction, we have — what, two million kids in schools?” says Morris. “Where we have them sitting in a classroom all day, masked, static, indoors. And we’re suggesting that having likely a smaller collection, outdoors, and again, we should be doing this masked. And encouraging them to do small groups, outdoors; to me, this is not a good balance of the risks and benefits. And once again I think we are unfairly targeting kids here.”

Nobody, anti-maskers and the White House perhaps aside, wants more people to get the virus. So what are we worried about, exactly? People opening their doors to 100 people, said Premier , or rummaging in a bowl or bag of candy, or lining up to get into apartment buildings. Dr. David Williams, the chief medical officer of health, said he worried about people congregating on sidewalks and exchanging candy.

De Villa spoke about people coming together. Dr. Lawrence Loh, Peel’s medical officer of health, said “(I) agree that if perfectly done, the risk can be minimized. The reality, much like mask wearing, is that it’s not likely this will be perfectly done.”

The entire provincial strategy has been about assuming people will follow rules, and now they seem to assume nobody will. Getting the virus from surface transmission is less and less likely: the first real-world evidence of this involved someone wiping their nose and touching an elevator button, and another man picking his teeth and doing the same. There’s a reason we reopened the playgrounds, right?

And Halloween seems purpose-built to be safe, with just a little effort. Give out candy outside, without getting too close. Use tongs, a tube, a slingshot, whatever. Pre-wrap gift bags. Keep to your family only. Keep your distance. We’ve been doing it for seven damned months.

“It’s not like kids are going to congregate in a huddle on the sidewalk like it’s a football game, with masks off, exchanging candy,” says Sharkawy. “That’s not how trick-or-treating happens. Every parent who takes their kids out knows: they’re going to scuttle from house to house. The risk is that they come inside.”

“Everyone knows how to line up and physically distance in our society, right?” says Morris. “There’s no reason we can’t do this here. I’m extremely disappointed by this.”

Look, the province was two to four weeks late in imposing restrictions. Testing was allowed to crash into a reset that may still be muddying the data. It’s unclear if the chief medical officer of health understands some fundamental things about the virus, much less Halloween. We are doing better than we have a right to, in Ontario.

But cancelling Halloween is indicative of the lack of a coherent plan, or coherent communication, or perhaps even fundamental understanding of what we are facing. It we can learn lessons from this pandemic, we should. Get outta here with telling kids to dress up and go on Zoom or whatever.

“The problem with the vernacular that they’re using is it almost invites people to say FU,” says Sharkawy. “I mean, I heard this, and I was frustrated, and I am the most conservative person (on safety) you will meet. I cancelled my kid’s 10-year-old birthday party. All my close friends hate me because I’ve been in Stage 2 for the last four months. And I am saying this is overkill, and you’re going to lose public favour, and create more acrimony, and take more away when there’s no science behind it, no basis. This is an optics decision, 100 per cent.

“We have got to win the battles that we need to, to not extinguish their resolve, their hope.”

This pandemic has been a long, hard time, and now winter is coming. It has taken so much away. Halloween was one we could keep, and even win. The province can still change this. We can still make this safe. We should, at the very least, try.

Bruce Arthur is a Toronto-based columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: