Cape Breton Post

Hockey team infects dozens

Old-timers squad travels from British Columbia’s interior region into Alberta and then spreads virus to family, workmates

- DAVID CARRIGG

VANCOUVER, B.C. — An old-timers hockey team travelled from British Columbia’s interior region into Alberta and returned with sick players, B.C.’s provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Wednesday.

Those players then spread the disease to dozens of people, including family and workmates.

“There’s a hockey team in the Interior that travelled to Alberta and has come back, and now there are dozens of people who are infected and it has spread in the community,” Henry said.

“I’m not going to give them away because I understand and what I’m hearing from my colleagues around the province, is it’s not unique. But I will say it was an adult hockey team that felt it was important to continue their travel and games across the border.”

Henry reported 834 cases of COVID-19 between noon Tuesday and noon Wednesday and 12 deaths.

In Alberta, over the same period, there were 1,685 new cases and 10 deaths. Alberta has 17,144 active cases of the disease while B.C. has 8,941. There are 97 people in intensive care in Alberta suffering from COVID-19, and 79 in B.C.

Henry wouldn’t reveal when the team travelled to Alberta, but said the disease in the home community was now into its third chain of transmissi­on.

“I can tell you that it was several dozen families that were infected. Several businesses affected, long-term care was affected,” she said.

There is no provincial health

order in place banning travel within B.C. or between the provinces. Instead, Henry is relying on a strong recommenda­tion that people don’t travel.

“I’m asking everybody in B.C. to consider the importance of not travelling right now unless it is essential for work or for medical care. This includes within B.C. and between provinces,” she said. “I cannot stop you by an order of getting into your car or going onto a plane. But I’m asking in the strongest of terms for us to stay put, to stay in our communitie­s and to protect our communitie­s.”

While the lion’s share of COVID-19 cases is being reported in the Vancouver Coastal Health and Fraser Health regions, Henry said those regions were seeing a flattening of daily cases reported, while the Interior and Northern Health regions were seeing cases grow.

There are now 569 active cases of COVID-19 in Interior Health and two active outbreaks in health-care facilities, both in Kelowna.

Henry said there are 57 active outbreaks in health care facilities, including the three most recent ones at Royal City Manor in New Westminste­r, Saanich Peninsula Hospital in Saanichton, and the West Coast General Hospital in Port Alberni.

Henry also reported two new community outbreaks — at the Cove Temporary Shelter in Surrey, where 17 people have contracted the virus, and the Millennium Pacific Greenhouse in Delta, where 10 workers are sick.

She said 10,201 people are isolated at home after being exposed to COVID-19.

Henry said there would be no mandatory vaccinatio­n order in B.C., once a vaccine arrives.

“I have full confidence these are going to be effective and safe vaccines when they are ready and approved for use here in Canada,” she said, adding that Britain had just approved the use of the Pfizer vaccine.

“We have no mandatory immunizati­on programs in this country and in this province. We do not expect that COVID immunizati­on will be mandatory either.”

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? British Columbia provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry.
POSTMEDIA NEWS British Columbia provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry.

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