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Province out of Atlantic bubble until at least January: Furey

While the number of active cases in the Maritime provinces has dropped slightly, Premier Andrew Furey confirmed Monday that Newfoundland and Labrador will continue to opt out of the Atlantic bubble at least until the new year.

P.E.I. decided last week to extend its decision to stay out of the isolation-free zone for the time being.

P.E.I. announced a number of recoveries Monday, bringing its total active cases to 14. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have 88 and 81 active cases, respectively.

Newfoundland announced eight new cases over the weekend, but none on Monday, bringing its number of active cases to 28.

“There will not be any changes to Dr. (Janice) Fitzgerald’s special measures order regarding travel from within the Atlantic provinces. The same goes for the borders in Labrador,” Furey said during Monday’s COVID-19 video briefing, referring to the province’s chief medical officer of health.

The new guidelines mean anyone coming to the province from the region must self-isolate for 14 days. However, they do not need to apply for a special exemption to travel here like those outside the region.

At the southern Labrador border, travellers entering the province must apply for a special exemption.

Furey said local businesses he’s heard from have been largely understanding of the rationale for the move. He said keeping travel-related cases contained is good for both the health of the population and for the economy in the long run.

Meanwhile, Fitzgerald told reporters Monday that she remains especially concerned about the stigmatization of those who either have COVID-19 or are suspected of importing the disease to the province.

Discouraging paranoia and misinformation about COVID-19 has been a frequent theme from public health officials since the beginning of the pandemic.

“I have concerns that people may not come forward for testing out of fear of how they will be treated either in their community or on social media,” Fitzgerald said. “This vilification of people who test positive for COVID, as well as those travelling to our province, needs to stop. It is a significance hindrance to our efforts in public health.”

She asked everyone to use the THINK acronym when posting on social media, which means making sure what you say is true, helpful, inspiring, necessary and kind.

“We cannot take the chance that a mild fever or sore throat is the common cold,” she said. “We can only identify and contain COVID-19 if we know where it is.”

Health Minister Dr. John Haggie added that people shouldn’t view the fact that some cases are still under investigation as “sinister.”

He said some positive tests only become known shortly before the tally is announced, and before a public health worker interviews the person who tested positive.

“Until that interview is complete, we have no real idea about the nature of that exposure or the route by which it may have got to the individual,” he said.

As a further step, he said, the Department of Health will add an extra table to its online pandemic guideline to indicate the status and source of new cases.

Fitzgerald and Furey, meanwhile, pleaded with residents to continue following guidelines and precautions, especially when it comes to seasonal gatherings.

While formal events such as weddings can have as many as 50 people if distancing and other protocols are firmly in place, informal gatherings are different.

Fitzgerald said people should stick to 20 close contacts throughout the entire season.

“You should not attend a gathering with one group of 20 on one night, and an entirely different group on another night,” she said.

Supermarket seek: Owner of Barrie’s ex-Collier Centre site wants residents to push for downtown grocery store

Downtown Barrie has been shopping for a grocery store for years.

Now, the owner of one well-known property within the city core is openly trying to attract a supermarket. Morrison Financial, which operates Lakeview Corporate Centre at (the former Collier Centre site), has released a survey that asks residents to make their pitch for a grocer.

“We know the demographics are right for a full-service grocer, but we have to prove it,” Morrison Financial president David Morrison told Simcoe.com. “I am not sure if you have seen the movie “Field of Dreams,” but we need to convince a grocer that, ‘if you build it, they will come’. The whole community wants it; they just have to express themselves.”

Collier Centre has been unsuccessful in this type of venture before — the building was initially proposed by Mady Developments and it was to feature Sobeys as an anchor tenant. However, forced Sobeys to pull out of the project in 2015.

Morrison Financial acquired the property in late 2018 from Fortress Real Developments, after Fortress . The site includes residential condominium units and about 187,000 square feet of total space for an office tower, and two storeys of retail.

Pizza shop Jimmy Chews and the Canadian National Institute for the Blind have leased space in the building. The restaurant should open there in February.  

Coun. Keenan Aylwin, whose ward includes the downtown, said a grocery store, when coupled with the Barrie Farmers’ Market and other local retailers, could help the area become a “vibrant, complete community.”

“There are many seniors and young people living in downtown Barrie who may not own a vehicle,” he said. “A grocery store would create a more walkable community and contribute to food security. We also need the population density to support amenities like a grocery store in the downtown. I would encourage those who can to support the farmers’ market and the many small businesses downtown who also contribute to food security.”

Morrison said his company is giving away 21 prizes to survey participants, including one year of free shopping, up to a maximum of $5,000. To participate in the survey, visit .