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Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Government of Canada Response COVID-19



Saha-TV Network, Wednesday April 15, 2020

Breaking New:
SWHO issues guidelines for lifting COVID-19 restrictions. Is Canada ready?
OTTAWA — Federal and provincial officials are starting to discuss how and when to start reopening schools and businesses but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau warned Tuesday the full-scale lockdowns most Canadians are living with right now will remain in place for at least several more weeks. 
 Similar discussions are happening around the world, as many countries are starting to show some positive signs of slowing the spread of COVID-19 — even as experts warn limited testing in most places could be masking the real picture of the disease.
The World Health Organization is trying to inject some co-ordination into these decisions, releasing new guidelines Tuesday for what should be in place before easing restrictions.
"The way down is much slower than the way up," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the WHO, said in a speech Monday. "That means control measures must be lifted slowly, and with control. It cannot happen all at once."
The WHO guidelines outline six areas officials must consider if they are to look at resuming activities. Here is where Canada stands on each of them.
1. Is transmission of the virus under control?
Short answer: We're not testing enough to know.
What the experts say: Eleanor Fish, a professor of immunology at the University of Toronto, said testing must become much more widespread before we really understand the state of community transmission.
Alison Thompson, a public health professor in the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy at the University of Toronto, said it takes a significant amount of time between a confirmed infection and fully tracing a person's contacts and testing them, to know whether that confirmed infection has resulted in many more infections.
"We have to make sure it actually is levelling off, or that community transmission has actually ground to a halt, which can take quite awhile," she said.
If restrictions are removed too quickly, thousands of people with COVID-19, who may not know they are infected, could potentially spread it fast and wide, she said.
Thompson also said it's time to stop thinking of the pandemic in terms of health versus the economy. If there isn't a healthy workforce the economy will continue to suffer, she said.
"We may see some short-term gains if we did ease up on some of these restrictions," she said. "But in the long run if we end up with an out-of-control situation with COVID, the economy will take much, much longer to recover."
2. Is the health-care system equipped to detect, test, isolate and treat every case, and trace every person who came into contact with a positive case?
Short answer: Not yet.
What the experts say: Timothy Sly, professor emeritus at Ryerson University's school of occupational and public health, said Canada has done "an abysmal job" at testing and tracing.
"We have a situation now essentially where we're groping along in the dark in terms of finding out who in fact is virus positive and who's virus negative. We've done an abysmal job at that," said Sly, who specializes in epidemiology.
Sly pointed to an especially woeful rate in Ontario where Premier Doug Ford has vowed to perform 8,000 tests daily by Wednesday, up from about 5,000. Alberta is among Canada's testing leaders with about 7,400 tests conducted daily, which Sly said is still not enough.
Still, he acknowledged there have been hurdles beyond Canada's control that have handcuffed efforts — notably, global shortages of equipment including swabs and laboratory chemicals needed to process test samples.
Sly said Health Canada's recent approval of a rapid, mobile hand-held testing device from an Ottawa company should help, as will a series of expanded testing criteria that various provinces have adopted in recent days.
Jianhong Wu, a distinguished research professor at York University who has led multiple national projects on SARS, pandemic influenza and immunization evaluation, said there is a close relationship between contact tracing, testing and social distancing.
"If you don't do well in one component, you need to significantly magnify your effort in other components," he said.
Sly said provinces are largely trying to contact people exposed to a confirmed case by telephone, which is not sustainable given the soaring number of cases.
He pointed to countries such as South Korea, which have employed cellphone data to track possible contacts. He said that is much more effective, but it would raise privacy issues.
"People are going to be hollering and screaming about that but it does seem to work," he said.
3. Are outbreaks minimized in special settings like health facilities and nursing homes?
Short answer: No.
What the experts say: Risks remain dangerously high in hundreds of nursing homes across the country.
Quebec, where long-term care centres have been particularly hard hit, announced Tuesday that inspections have identified 41 seniors residences that require special monitoring because of a high number of COVID-19 cases. Premier Francois Legault on Tuesday appealed for people with experience in health care to help out in understaffed long-term care facilities.
Canada's chief public health officer, Theresa Tam, said Monday nearly half of the country's deaths from the novel coronavirus have come from long-term care facilities, and she predicted the number will increase despite provinces' efforts to fight the problem.
Twenty-nine residents in a 65-bed nursing home in Bobcaygeon, Ont., have died amid the pandemic. Another facility in Toronto recorded 22 deaths by Monday, while the Lynn Valley Care Centre in North Vancouver, B.C., has had 18 residents die. In many facilities workers are also getting sick in high numbers.
After the Lynn Valley Care Centre outbreak, British Columbia moved to stop staff from working in multiple facilities as a way to slow the spread of the virus. Ontario made the same move Tuesday.
Isaac Bogoch, an infectious-disease specialist at the University of Toronto and the University Health Network, feels that strategy, along with limiting visits with seniors and infection-prevention methods, could go a long way in minimizing risks for possible subsequent waves of COVID-19 among the elderly.
Canada now has guidelines for helping to protect long-term care residents and workers, but Tam indicated this week the outbreaks are the biggest concern that has arisen in Canada's COVID-19 situation over the last two weeks.
4.  Are there measures in workplaces and schools to prevent the spread of the virus?
Short answer: Not yet.
What the experts say about workplaces: In most provinces, only essential businesses like grocery stores and pharmacies can remain open. All others must operate with employees working from home. If they can't do that, they must close. Restaurants can generally only allow takeout or delivery.
Many businesses report being too focused on setting their employees up to work from home, and haven't yet begun to think about what to do to reopen.
Provinces and business groups say it's too early to speculate on which measures can be lifted. Any shift in approach would come at the advice of the chief medical health officer "and with extreme caution so as to avoid a resurgence of the virus as has been seen in other jurisdictions," said Hayley Chazan, a spokeswoman for Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott.
The Canadian Chamber of Commerce says it wants clear advice from public health authorities before restrictions loosen.
"We fully expect that there will unfortunately be an instance where an employee does test positive. What does that mean for the workplace? Does there have to be a total shutdown? A deep clean?" asked Mark Agnew, the chamber's senior director of international policy.
Sector-specific rules will remain critical as the lockdown starts to lift, he said, noting that retailers, meat processors and refrigerator technicians might all require different protocols around physical distancing and personal protective equipment.
What the experts say about schools: Kids, while less susceptible to the novel coronavirus, are well equipped to transmit it.
"Children are generally less compliant with effective hand hygiene, and they don't necessarily control their secretions," said Dr. Nisha Thampi, infection prevention and control lead at Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario in Ottawa. "That presents an exposure risk to the staff as well as to other children."
The Public Health Agency of Canada has stopped short of recommending specific changes schools could make to their operations, but did offer more general guidance for schools in February, before Canada began to really experience the impact of COVID-19. That included regular hand-washing and supervised use of hand sanitizer, education on proper "respiratory etiquette" such as covering coughs and sneezes, ramped-up cleaning and disinfection routines within school buildings, and reinforcement of "no sharing" policies.
Thampi said medical experts will also have to craft advice that strikes a balance between student safety and developmental needs.
"Children have always seen school as being a social environment," she said, adding many are no longer getting that kind of stimulation in the era of physical distancing. "How can we be sensitive to that while also teaching them about infection-prevention strategies?"
5. Are the risks of importing more cases from outside the country being managed?
Short answer: Mostly yes.
What the experts say: The federal government has adopted once-unthinkable measures over the past month to keep more cases of COVID-19 from arriving in Canada. Those include banning most non-Canadians from entering the country and a 14-day mandatory quarantine for anyone who does.
On Tuesday, Ottawa upped that game again, now requiring anyone arriving to explain their quarantine plan and if it's not good enough, they will be forced to stay in federal sites.
The trouble is that Canada is heavily reliant from both an economic and social perspective on foreign trade and immigration. That means it can't keep the border closed forever.
"We have done a lot, but economically it's not sustainable," said Daniel Beland, director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada.
Experts say there is a variety of potential avenues to reopen the border and manage the risk.
Being able to screen potential visitors, preferably with on-the-spot testing at airports and other ports of entry, would make it much easier to identify carriers and either bar them from coming into Canada or put them into quarantine.
Steven J. Hoffman, a York University professor and the scientific director of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Institute of Population and Public Health, said the 14-day quarantine "could be the enabler that allows government to reopen our borders, particularly if that system is really up and running and fully implemented. And enforced in a way that we can have confidence in it."
There could also be more targeted travel restrictions for visitors from different countries, depending on how those countries are managing the virus, though experts acknowledge partial bans and quarantine requirements could create challenges and anger.
Beland nonetheless believes Canadians will need to accept that there will be changes in the way they travel, similar to how the 9/11 terrorist attacks led to increased security measures.
6. Are local communities are educated, engaged and empowered to adjust to the "new norm"?
Short answer: Maybe
What the experts say: Canadians have been inundated with warnings from political leaders and public health experts for weeks now to be prepared for bad news. Trudeau has not been shy about making sure people know that until there is a vaccine, we are all going to have to get used to having at least some restrictions on our movements and behaviours.
In Canada, most experts think the number of cases is going to peak this month. The data based on the limited epidemiology Canada has shows the number of cases was doubling every three to four days in the last two weeks of March, but had slowed to doubling every five to eight days in the first two weeks of April.
But officials also warn of more than one wave, with flare-ups and new infections continuing for months. A vaccine is at least 12 to 18 months away, and the "new norm" really means longer-term adjustments to limit the impact of those new outbreaks.
There have been warnings from some experts around the world that things like live concerts and massive public gatherings for sporting events won't be safe for months to come.
Hoffman said he thinks Canadians must get ready for an up-and-down scenario, "where first the government lessens these restrictions and then a couple weeks later has to tighten them again in light of new data and new information about where spread is happening or how it's happening."
 This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 14, 2020.
With files from Mia Rabson and Lee Berthiaume in Ottawa, Kelly Geraldine Malone in Winnipeg, Cassandra Szklarski and Michelle McQuigge in Toronto, and Christopher Reynolds and Julian McKenzie in Montreal.
Latest Federal News

Bill C-14 - Historic Support Bill Passes Parliament!
 

Bill C-14 was passed on Saturday in an emergency sitting of Parliament – the largest support program to help Canadian businesses ever proposed and passed by a Canadian government:
  •  Bill C-14 amends the Income Tax Act to introduce the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS). The subsidy will cover 75 per cent of an employee’s wages for employers of all sizes and across all sectors, including not-for-profits and charities.
  • We have adjusted the qualifying criteria, so that employers only need to demonstrate a drop in revenues of 15% in March (one month time period), and 30% in April or May. The subsidy would provide up to $847 per employee, per week, between March 15 and June 6.
  • To ensure employers can quickly rehire staff, we will also provide a 100-per-cent refund for certain employer-paid contributions to EI, the CPP, the Quebec Pension Plan, and the Quebec Parental Insurance Plan. This will ensure that workers can access a decent income, and position themselves to rebound once the outbreak has passed.
  • Our federal government has Canadians’ back, and is helping Canadians keep their jobs as we continue to fight the COVID-19 outbreak.

Support to Keep Temporary Foreign Workers and Canadians Safe
 

On Monday, our federal government announced $50 million to help farmers, fish harvesters, and all food production and processing employers bringing in experienced workers from abroad to cover all costs involved in ensuring workers complete the mandatory 14-day self-isolation:
  • All across Canada, many food producers rely on temporary foreign workers to be able to produce and sell quality foods at affordable prices.
  • These experienced workers are essential to our food supply system and Canada’s food security.
  • This applies especially to fresh fruits and vegetables, from planting season to harvest.
  • This is why the government granted an exemption from the border measures to temporary foreign workers, provided they follow the strict 14-day self-isolation rule.
  • The government also provided clear guidelines to employers on how to safely allow these 14-day isolations, and mandated they pay foreign workers for the two weeks they can’t work.
  • Employers must also provide food, transportation, accommodations, and basic supplies.
  • Recognizing the importance of this responsibility, our government is providing employers $1500 per employee to support this – conditional on employers not violating these rules.
  • All workers are screened before they are able to come to Canada and have to follow strict public health directives on the plane and after they land in Canada.

Federal Guidelines for Long-term Care Homes
 

Yesterday, the Minister of Seniors, the Honourable Deb Schulte, also announced that our federal government has worked with provinces and territories on guidelines for long-term care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Long-term care is under provincial jurisdiction, but we have seen some truly tragic outbreaks in care homes across the country and the federal government is looking at all the ways it can help protect this very vulnerable group.

Highlights of the interim guidance include:
  • All visitors to long-term care homes should wear a mask.
  • If there are no cases of COVID in the home, mealtimes should be staggered to allow residents to keep 2-meters apart.
  • If there are suspected cases of COVID in the home, all residents should be served meals in their individual rooms while still providing enough supervision.
  • High-touch surfaces should be cleaned and disinfected much more often.
  • Volunteers should be limited to essential roles only, meaning necessary to basic personal care, medical care, or compassionate (e.g. end of life) care.
  • Homes, in consultation with local public health authorities, should consider resident and staff cohorting, and limit the number of staff working in multiple units as much as possible.

The Minister of Health, the Honourable Patty Hadju, said today that based on how tragically seniors in long-term care have been affected and how many gaps we are seeing in the system of care – going forward there is an opportunity for our governments to move towards a stronger system that better values and supports the workers who care for the people we love.
 

Health Canada Approves Spartan Bioscience’s Portable COVID-19 Test
 

There was great news yesterday regarding Ottawa-based company Spartan Bioscience:
  • Health Canada has approved the company’s portable, quick COVID-19 test.
  • The test can deliver positive results in around 30 minutes!
  • Our first priority will be to support remote communities which don’t have the labs or capacity to get quick test results.
  • Ontario has ordered more than 900,000 testing kits, Alberta has ordered 100,000 kits, and Quebec has ordered 200,000.
  • These tests will only be available for Canadian orders. Our priority must be to meet Canada’s needs first. The company says they will consider exports only and if all Canadian demand has been met first.
     

Latest Update from Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam

  • Over 450,000 Canadians have been tested to date, with around 6% confirmed positive.
  • Testing continues to be a core part of Canada’s strategy to flatten and ultimately crush the curve.
  • Our government continues to work with provinces to ensure they have everything they need to have high capacity for testing.
  • Ontario now has the capacity to do approximately 14,000 tests a day. Provincial leadership continues to ramp up the province’s actual daily tests, with a goal of 8,000 per day by tomorrow and 16,000 per day by the beginning of May.
  • Dr. Tam also said over the weekend that nearly half of Canada’s COVID-19 deaths have been in long-term care homes, reinforcing the need to keep these facilities secure.
  • Earlier today, Dr. Tam also had a message regarding children saying that “… silence and secrets do not protect children. Honesty and openness do.” Our kids understand that things aren’t normal, and we should be honest with them that this will be hard for a while longer, but that we will get through it. Not only will this help them understand; it will make it easier for them to sort out the truth online.
  • As always, if you believe you have COVID-19 symptoms, use the government’s self-assessment tool online or on the Canada COVID-19 Support App.
     

Daily Update from Prime Minister Trudeau
 

In this morning’s update, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shared the following:
  • Over the weekend, we received new shipments of essential personal protective equipment (PPE), including four planes worth of N95 masks. Workers are now unpacking and validating them so we can start shipping them to the provinces and territories as quickly as possible.
  • These new N95 masks are in addition to the more than 820,000 that went to the provinces last week. All told, we have 1.1 million N95s ready to be shipped to the provinces and territories, with more to come.
  • We have also received millions of pairs of gloves, and we’ll be getting new protective gowns delivered from domestic suppliers starting next Monday.
  • We also continue to ramp up our domestic manufacturing of PPE.
  • Today the government announced $130 million to support the North:
    • $72.6 million transfer to the governments of Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut to support their COVID-19 health and social services preparations;
    •  $17.3 million to territorial governments to support critical air carriers to ensure continued supply of food, medicine, and other essential goods to remote and fly-in communities;
    • $15 million in support to northern businesses;
    • $25 million to Nutrition North Canada to subsidize food and hygiene products.
  • While 6 million Canadians have applied for emergency benefits and 130,000 companies applied for CEBA, the PM mentioned that we know there are more who still need help, including people who do not currently qualify for CERB, students, and essential workers.
  • There will be more announcements on these groups this week, and on support for commercial rent (!) and on sector-specific supports.
  • Our government is also strengthening the Quarantine Act rule for travellers to self-isolate: if they don’t show a credible plan, they will be required to quarantine in a hotel.
  • Finally, the Prime Minister announced $20 million for the Canada Food Inspection Agency, so it can hire more food inspectors to strengthen our food security.

Update on the Canada Emergency Business Account
 

Last week, we gave details on another measure to support our businesses: the new Canada Emergency Business Account (CEBA). We have more information to share today:
  • CEBA provides $25 billion to eligible financial institutions so they can provide interest-free loans to small businesses and not-for-profits. These loans – guaranteed and funded by the Government of Canada – will ensure that small businesses have access to the capital they need, so they can pay for rent and other important costs over the next couple of months.
  • Qualifying businesses can receive up to $40,000.
  • The program applies to Canadian employers – including not-for-profits – who had $50,000 to $1 million in total payroll in 2019.
  • Loans may be repaid over 2 years with no interest, with an option for another three years with interest. Repaying the balance of the loan on or before December 31, 2022 (not 2020 as we said in last week’s update), will result in loan forgiveness of 25% (up to $10,000).
  • Early estimates so far show that in the first 48 hours of CEBA’s implementation, around 130,000 businesses have received loans!

Amazing Resource List of Funding and Support for Artists
 

I know that artists in Davenport (and across Canada) have been especially hard hit by this virus. Many of you and your organizations don’t fit neatly into the various supports the federal government has announced so far.
I am working hard to advocate for more help for you. In the meantime, I would like to share a link to a page of resources and emergency funds for artists. So grateful to the CBC and all groups for assembling this list.
 

Davenport Questions and Answers
 

Q: What are you doing to protect vulnerable seniors in our long-term care facilities?

A: Long-term care homes and other medical facilities fall under provincial jurisdiction, but the federal government recognizes how vital it is to protect our seniors. We released guidelines over the weekend after consulting with the provinces and Territories.

Like you, I have been greatly disturbed and saddened by the news stories about outbreaks in these homes, and I believe every level of government needs to step up and do much more. We need to better value our care-workers and everyone who takes care of those we love.
 

Volunteer and Donation Services in Davenport—Help Out or Find Help
 

Food banks are experiencing a huge surge in demand during COVID-19, while at the same time seeing a drop in volunteers and donations. Not all of us can, but if you have extra time or wish to donate please help one of our Davenport food banks. They really need your help!

Community Food Banks in Davenport
These two local food banks do amazing work for Davenport:

Volunteer Groups in Davenport
These groups are connecting volunteers to Davenport residents who need all kinds of help.

Help For Disadvantaged and Vulnerable People in Davenport
  • Abrigo has let us know that they are delivering their services over the phone
  • Our Place (1183 Davenport Road Lower Level - Entrance on, Delaware) is providing hot takeaway meals 2-5PM, Tuesday-Friday

To help out our doctors, nurses, and hospitals, please donate blood!
  • Blood donations are always needed, especially in emergencies. Go to Blood.ca to learn more.

Stay up to date at all levels of government


Canada – Federal: Canada.ca/coronavirus
Ontario – Provincial: Ontario.ca/coronavirus
Toronto – City: Toronto.ca/coronavirus
 
Thank you  for doing all you can to flatten and crush the curve!

We are seeing positive signs that our efforts are working, so stay strong.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

CITY TORONTO, BREAKING NEWS & UPDATE COVID19,

Tuesday April 14, 2020. News and and Update from City Toronto: April 14, 2020 Good evening Dear Friends and Neighbor's I want to thank everyone for your efforts during this very difficult time. It is very important for all of us, to the best of our ability to follow the mandatory social distancing bylaw! Please see the following update regarding COVID-19 key information and resources: Today, Toronto’s Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Eileen de Villa, General Manager of the City’s Shelter, Support & Housing Administration (SSHA), Mary-Anne Bédard, University Health Network Executive Director of Health and Social Policy, Dr. Andrew Boozary, and Inner City Health Associates (ICHA) Medical Director, Dr. Andrew J. Bond, provided an update on existing and forthcoming actions taken to protect individuals experiencing homelessness from COVID-19. Individuals experiencing homelessness are particularly vulnerable to respiratory infections, including COVID-19. There are currently 30 confirmed client cases of COVID-19 in the city’s emergency shelter system. Given the scale of this pandemic, additional cases are expected. The City, with the help of our community and heath sector partners has put measures in place for active screening, testing and providing isolation spaces to slow transmission and mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on our emergency shelter system. SSHA continues to lead the City’s three-tiered approach to protecting vulnerable people experiencing homelessness. The three tiers – prevention, mitigation and recovery – allow the City, community partners, and healthcare providers to respond to each stage of the pandemic. The City has implemented an inter-governmental and sectoral response to COVID-19 involving the city, provincial/federal government, provincial healthcare sector, and community non-profit sector. We have moved over 1,000 people to programs that meet a range of client needs, including spaces in community centers, hotel rooms, and permanent housing and we are on track to move another 1000 into new spaces by April 30. Weeks ago, before the virus was spreading within the community, SSHA engaged community partners in prevention. In partnership with Toronto Public Health, SSHA provided updated guidance, training and resources to the sector to initiate enhanced Infection Prevention and Control (IPAC) measures. Ongoing screening for illness and travel history began by phone during intake and in-person and, in the following weeks, a new screening tool for homeless service settings was shared widely. The City has distributed $1.2 million among shelters, 24-hour respites, and drop-ins for cleaning supplies, personal protective equipment (PPE), and wage increases for frontline staff. Physical distancing remains one of the best ways to prevent spreading COVID-19. To enable people within our emergency shelter system to physically distance, since March 16, 11 new facilities have been mobilized with more than 470 spaces to allow for physical distancing. The City has also secured more than 1,200 spaces at 12 hotel locations to further enable physical distancing and provide isolation space. Eight of these sites are active and we are working quickly to activate the others. One of the additional hotel sites has been activated as an isolation program with 200 spaces to respond to the increasing number of people undergoing COVID-19 testing. SSHA staff are working with ICHA to identify those most vulnerable to COVID-19, including the elderly and those with health conditions, to move into new spaces or add measures to protect them in pace. As of today, 176 shelter clients have been transported for testing and isolation related to COVID-19. Clients are transported directly to provincial assessment centres. Following testing, clients are brought to a dedicated isolation space with medical and harm reduction supports as they await test results. The clearing of encampments has been suspended since the start of the pandemic. Street outreach has been enhanced to increase safety, cleaning and garbage removal, provide advice on public health recommendations and hygiene kits, and help screen for symptoms. Portable washrooms and handwashing stations have been deployed at locations across the city. With prevention and mitigation strategies in place, the City is working with partners to strengthen recovery supports. The interim recovery site operated by the City in partnership with ICHA and the wider healthcare sector is now operational. Regardless of this pandemic, the best and only solution to homelessness is to provide people with permanent housing. The new Rapid Housing Access Initiative, introduced at the start of the pandemic, has helped to prioritize access to housing for individuals in the shelter systems. More than 250 vacant Toronto Community Housing units have been identified for the initiative and, by the end of the week, 50 people will have been housed. Housing referrals are made through the Coordinated Access system and people matched with housing are provided with housing stability supports and home furnishings. Units are being prioritized for particularly vulnerable individuals, including seniors. The City is also looking beyond the current extreme situation and this unprecedented expansion of our service system into new locations, and considering the opportunity to leverage investments to secure properties through purchase or long-term lease to secure for future affordable and supportive housing. More information on supports for individuals experiencing homelessness is available at https://www.toronto.ca/home/covid-19/covid-19-social-support/. If you or someone you know needs street outreach, call 311 or Central Intake at 416-338-4766. A list of food banks and soup kitchens in Ward 24 can be found here: https://bit.ly/2RcvdRV Please remember to call ahead to book to ensure they are properly stocked. For those interested in volunteering, food banks are always looking for volunteers, so please feel free to save and share this information. The City’s website is updated daily with the latest health advice, and information about City services and social supports. Check https://www.toronto.ca/covid-19/ for answers to common questions before contacting the Toronto Public Health COVID-19 Hotline or 311. Stay up to date at all levels of government Canada – Federal: Canada.ca/coronavirus Ontario – Provincial: Ontario.ca/coronavirus Toronto – City: Toronto.ca/coronavirus

Monday, April 13, 2020

BREAKING NEWS & UPDATE COVID19, CITY TORONTO

Charities, groups adapt Easter programs for those in need amid COVID-19 TORONTO — For almost a decade, the Easter long weekend has brought almost 500 Haligonians in need to the Souls Harbour Rescue Mission, where they tuck into a free, three-course meal surrounded by other diners and volunteers. They still got to enjoy their hot ham, mashed potatoes and many of the other fixings this year, but one thing was off the menu: company. "It's a really nice sight, but obviously we are not doing it this year," said Michelle Porter, the chief executive of the charitable organization, which cancelled its annual Easter gathering and instead has offered takeout holiday meals Souls Harbour Rescue Mission is not alone. Many organizations serving people most in need had to call off or adjust their typical Easter plans to help stop the spread of COVID-19 and abide by demands from politicians and public authorities to limit gatherings. People recognize the need to be safe in these uncertain times, but for the community, the meal's shift was a "disappointment," said Porter. "It's even more important that we're able to serve a meal because we're the only place serving lunch (to them) right now," she said. "We got a few requests or Facebook messages from people who wouldn't normally come to Souls Harbour for a meal, but are looking for something special for Easter because they haven't been able to either go shop or are not able to afford a ham or turkey this year." Keith Hambly, the chief executive at Fred Victor, a Toronto organization that operates shelters and affordable and transitional housing, was also seeing that need first-hand. His charity's Friends Restaurant, a Queen Street East spot offering weekday brunch or dinner for free or at a low cost, is a hit around the holidays. Like Souls Harbour, it had to switch up its usual traditions. "Since the COVID-19 declaration of emergency a few weeks ago, we've had to do takeout meals as opposed to congregate dining," said Hambly. "We actually had staff and management deliver the meals on Good Friday and again ... on Easter Monday." Hambly was looking forward to his Easter Monday shift delivering some of the roughly 300 prepared meals put together by Fred Victor. Turkey, he thought, had been on the menu for Good Friday, but Easter Monday would likely see ham distributed. Over at Salvation Army, "it's a very different Easter," said spokesperson John Murray. The charity with branches throughout Canada helps over a million people through housing, food, disaster aid, and camps and church services, but the organization has had to make adjustments quickly during the crisis. Its Easter church service was hosted online this year and its community feeding programs, where members of the public in need could visit some Salvation Army sites for food or a meal, are being adjusted. "We've taken those feeding programs out into the community and we're delivering them through our emergency disaster vehicles," Murray said, rattling off a list of locations being targeted by the service, including Hamilton and London, Ont. Over in Halifax, he said the Salvation Army is focusing much of its energy on feeding people in a series of pop-up shelters erected to combat COVID-19. The work the Salvation Army is doing this year has particular importance, said Murray, because of COVID-19. The federal government has committed $100 million for organizations that help get food to Canadians who can't afford groceries or who have uncertain access to food and other basic necessities, including Indigenous Peoples and remote northern populations. That funding is being allocated to groups like Food Banks Canada, the Salvation Army, Second Harvest, Community Food Centres Canada, and Breakfast Club of Canada, who have been calling for donations and support because of an uptick in demand for their services. "We're seeing people who have never come to the Salvation Army before who never thought for a minute they would need the services of a not-for-profit organization, all of a sudden going, 'Wow, I don't have a job. I've got mortgage payments I've got car payments. I've got to pay the heating bill, and I need more food,'" Murray said. "The pandemic is just an extraordinary situation for us." News that deal to cut global oil production has been finalized is welcomed in Canada. News that a deal was finalized by OPEC and other oil producing nations to cut production by nearly 10 million barrels per day is being welcomed in Canada, where provinces have suffered drastic revenue losses due to rock-bottom crude prices. "This is good. We welcome any news that brings stability to global oil markets," Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'Regan said in an emailed statement Sunday. The agreement between the cartel, Russia and other countries came late last week and followed a supply battle that began last month when Russia refused to cut its output amid plunging demand due to the COVID-19 pandemic, prompting Saudi Arabia to increase its oil production and reduce its price. Video conference negotiations were held last week, which included representatives from the Alberta government. Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, who commented Saturday on the negotiations and the hope for their success, noted his province had not been asked to constrain production. "We've been very clear in conveying to OPEC, the United States and others around the world that Alberta has already been in curtailment of production for the past 15 months and that we cannot really affect global prices because we do not have global market access. We don't have those pipelines to the coast," Kenney told reporters during a teleconference on Alberta's pandemic response. "Even if we wanted to surge production, we would be capped out at about four million barrels per day that we could ship through existing pipelines plus crude by rail," he added. The deal that was finalized Sunday reportedly allows Mexico to cut only 100,000 barrels a month, which had been a sticking point after the talks last week. Mexico's energy minister tweeted that the group of nations agreed to cut 9.7 million barrels a day to begin May 1, and energy officials from other countries shared similar information Sunday. O'Regan, who participated in a conference call Friday with G20 energy ministers, had refused to speculate on whether Canada might consider curtailing its production as part of the broader multilateral effort, but said it's no secret that production has dropped in Newfoundland, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also wouldn't say Friday whether Canada would take measures to reduce its output, although he noted that Alberta has already curtailed production and that Canada would "continue to look to make sure that other countries are doing their part." On Sunday, O'Regan said Canada is committed to achieving price certainty and economic stability. "The federal government is deeply concerned about oil price instability and the impact on thousands of workers in Canada's energy sector, and their families," the email stated. Kenney on Saturday chastised the "reckless actions of the Saudis and Russians" which he said flooded global inventories to the point that extremely low prices would continue for at least 18 months. "There's just no sugar-coating that," he said, adding he awaits news of federal plan to help the energy industry. O'Regan said last week that the long-awaited bailout would contain measures to improve "liquidity" for Canada's energy sector and is coming soon, but he didn't say when. Refugee shelter in Toronto reports outbreak of COVID-19. A refugee shelter in downtown Toronto is reporting four cases of COVID-19, a problem the organization managing the facility said extends to other shelters in the city. Homes First Society said it was first notified about the cases at Willowdale Welcome Centre on Thursday and the organization is waiting to hear back on multiple other tests. The facility currently houses more than 200 people. "People are very frightened, these are things that don't make us comfortable," said Patricia Mueller, CEO of Homes First Society, which operates other shelters in Toronto for people who are homeless or struggling with addiction. "This is all new ground for our staff in terms of trying to educate about physical distancing." Mueller said staff have erected plexiglass shields at counters and have shuffled residents to different shelters to space out occupants, but it can be difficult to get people to take physical distancing rules seriously. She added that other shelters her organization manages have also seen COVID-19 cases. In some of the organization's shelters for people with addictions, she said staff can't leave out hand sanitizer because residents will consume it. Mueller said staff and residents have all been given personal protective equipment like surgical masks, but she said the organization will likely run out of supplies in two or three weeks. "We are, in the shelter sector, forgotten about when it comes to personal protective equipment," said Mueller. "We have had some donations and for that I'm eternally grateful, but we haven't become the cause celebre of any movie star or any famous hockey player yet." Still, Mueller said she is not aware of any staff having walked out or refused work out of fear of the coronavirus. Earlier this week, dozens of staff walked out of a group home for disabled adults in Markham, Ont., after multiple staff and residents tested positive for the coronavirus. Management said they had to pitch in to help run the home after all but four workers left their posts out of fear of COVID-19. And in the Montreal area, 31 residents at a long-term care home have died in less than a month after workers walked off the job there. Ontario Premier Doug Ford has said workers and residents at shelters and care homes will be prioritized for COVID-19 screening as the province plans to increase testing to 8,000 per day by the coming week. Ford has said the province plans to test 16,000 people per day by early May. The province reported another 401 cases of COVID-19 on Sunday, bringing the total number of cases to above 7,000. Health officials also reported 21 more deaths for a new total of 274. Meanwhile in Toronto, the municipal government said officers issued 48 tickets to people who weren't following physical distancing guidelines on Sunday The city announced on Saturday that officers would start immediately issuing tickets instead of trying to educate residents first. Toronto has been one of the hardest hit cities with over 2,225 confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 and 85 people in intensive care. Boosting PPE supply ‘not a top priority’ in years before outbreak: minister: Hannah Jackson Increasing Canada's strategic stock of personal protective equipment (PPE) was "not a top priority," in the years before the novel coronavirus outbreak, the country's minister of employment, workforce development and disability inclusion said. In an interview with The West Block's Mercedes Stephenson, Carla Qualtrough, who served as Canada's minister of Public Services and Procurement (PSPC) from 2017 to 2019, said during her tenure with PSPC, officials "didn't turn our minds as much" to updating Canada's PPE reserve despite warnings after the SARS outbreak that another pandemic could occur. "We were very focused, as you know, on defence procurement, on getting the coast guard the ships they need, on getting the navy, getting--fixing-- Phoenix," Qualtrough said. "We had a lot on our plate as PSPC and that was not a top priority, no." She said the Canadian government moved to acquire more equipment in mid-to-late January. "I would say in mid-to-late January, we knew that this was an issue in terms of getting all of our ducks in a row, working with provinces and territories, and PSPC working with Public Health Agency, working with Health Canada, working with the provinces, took a number of steps to ensure that we had a proper inventory of what was out there, that we identified gaps that we looked around the country to see who was producing what, that we looked around the world to see where we could get further material and devices from, and the collaborative effort really started to ramp up then," she said. Asked if she thinks the federal government moved too slowly in preparing for the COVID-19 pandemic, Qualtrough said officials were making the "best decisions" with the information available to them. "You always look back and say, 'what if I had done this?' Or 'could I have done that?'" she said. "But right now, as we’re living it in real-time, what we are endeavouring to do every day is keep at it, keep making the best decisions. Rely on the science, rely on the experts, deliver as quickly and reliably as we can for Canadians and I think history will tell the broader question of how and if it was enough." Now, up against a highly competitive market and global shortages, Canadian officials have been working desperately to source PPE for the country's frontline workers. Asked by reporters earlier this week just how dire the situation is in Canada, the country's deputy chief public health officer, Dr. Howard Njoo, said it is difficult to provide specific numbers because the situation is dynamic with supplies being delivered and used each day. But, Canada's current Minister of Public Services and Procurement, Anita Anand, confirmed on Tuesday that Canada had received a shipment of eight million surgical masks, as well as other supplies ordered directly by Nova Scotia and hard-hit Quebec. Speaking at a press conference, Anand said Ottawa is expecting other deliveries from China “in the days to come.” “The reality is that we are operating in a highly competitive global environment and international logistics are challenging,” Anand told reporters. “We are working closely with our partners around the world, including embassies, as well as with on the ground logistics and coordination firms, to ensure that supplies come more from the source to where they are needed in Canada right here, right now with hundreds of millions of pieces of equipment ordered.” According to Anand, Canada has also sourced more than 230 million surgical masks, and has ordered roughly 75 million N95 masks. “Amongst other supplies, we have also ordered over 113,000 litres of hand sanitizer, most of which is expected to be delivered this month,” she said. “There is no question that a lot of work is going into sourcing all of these health supplies and many more supplies in Canada and around the world,” Anand said. “But I know that the work does not end there. "We will not rest until these supplies are in Canada, in our hands and ultimately in the hands of the many health care workers on the front lines of this crisis.” Canada has also ramped up domestic manufacturing, and is looking into whether some PPE, including masks, can be disinfected for reuse. On Saturday, Alberta’s health minister Tyler Shandro said the province would be sending N95 and procedural masks, gloves, goggles and ventilators to Ontario, Quebec and B.C., as the province has enough PPE to meet demand. He said healthcare experts are “very confident in the modelling data and in the expected need for PPE and ventilators.” What's more, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced this week that his government is working with several Canadian companies in order to manufacture 30,000 ventilators. According to Trudeau, the government has signed letters of intent with a number of partners, including Thornhill Medical, CAE, Ventilators for Canadians and a group led by Starfish Medical. “These purchases will help increase our capacity to make sure these life-saving machines are made right here at home,” he said. anada building its own supply chain of personal protective equipment in China When Cargojet flight 1392 touched down in Hamilton on Saturday it brought with it millions of badly needed N95 respirator masks to help in the fight against COVID-19. It was the third delivery of critical supplies arriving under a made-for-Canada plan set up with the help of diplomats and consultants in China, a warehouse in Shanghai, and two of Canada's airlines. The plan was born out of urgency. With the global market for medical supplies overwhelmed by chaos and acts of piracy, Canada needed to take some of the risk out of securing everything from badly needed medical masks to gowns and gloves. Federal bureaucrats and political staff handling procurement of medical supplies were frustrated by deliveries showing up late. Unreliable and profiteering brokers were driving prices through the roof. Rival countries were buying shipments out from under each other. What Canada hopes will be a partial solution got its start in the embassy in Beijing. Dominic Barton, Canada's ambassador to China, redeployed much of the staff at Canada's embassy, consulates and trade offices all over China. The diplomatic staff flipped their role from selling Canada to the Chinese, to buying Chinese medical supplies for Canada. While shipments are arriving, Canada's plan isn't foolproof. The Toronto Star reported that Canada recently got a shipment of testing swabs that were found to be contaminated with what is believed to be mould. "Cutting deals and securing quality supplies quickly is probably the biggest challenge in this entire thing," a federal official working directly on Canada’s procurement efforts told CBC News. Coronavirus in N.Y.C.: Latest Updates The governor and the mayor disagree over the school shutdown. A day after Mayor Bill de Blasio said that New York City schools would be closed for the remainder of the academic year because of the coronavirus pandemic, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo continued to insist that the final decision was his. “We won’t open schools one minute sooner than they should be opened,” the governor said Sunday, “but we won’t open schools one minute later than they should be opened either.” “I do not know what we will be doing in June,” he added, in a seeming rebuke to the mayor. “Nobody knows what we will be doing in June.” Earlier on Sunday, Mr. de Blasio said that the governor had “done a very good job in this crisis” but that it was clear that schools should be closed until September. Mr. de Blasio had informed Mr. Cuomo of his school-closing plan in a text message on Saturday. [Get the latest news and updates on the coronavirus in the New York region.] Statewide, 758 more people died, bringing the total to 9,385. Mr. Cuomo said on Sunday that 758 more people had died in New York, bringing the total number of people killed by the coronavirus in the state to 9,385 as of Sunday evening. Other indicators were on the positive side, the governor said, continuing last week’s pattern: even as hundreds of people died daily, rates of hospitalization and other data suggested that the spread of the virus had slowed. [Coronavirus in New York: A map and the case count.] New testing sites are planned for hard-hit communities. New York City last week released preliminary data showing that the coronavirus was killing black and Latino people in the city at twice the rate that it is killing white people. On Sunday, Mr. Blasio announced that the city would open testing centers to begin addressing those disparities. “We cannot accept this inequality,” he said. He said that in the coming days, the city would open the testing centers in East New York, Brooklyn; Morrisania, the Bronx; Harlem, Manhattan; Jamaica, Queens; and Clifton, Staten Island. Stay up to date at all levels of government Canada – Federal: Canada.ca/coronavirus Ontario – Provincial: Ontario.ca/coronavirus Toronto – City: Toronto.ca/coronavirus

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