Penticton Herald

Quebec schools spike 2 weeks after re-opening

- By NICOLE THOMPSON

A cluster of COVID-19 cases in Quebec’s elementary schools is shining a light on the cost of reopening Canada’s hardest hit provinces, as Ontario announced Friday it was eyeing a regional approach to pandemic recovery.

At least 41 staff and students tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s in the first two weeks after elementary schools outside the Montreal area reopened, the province’s education department announced.

“It’s normal that by having the daycare, the school being open to the community, there can be cases,” said Dr. Horacio Arruda, the province’s director of public health.

“The advantage in those areas is that they’re young children, and we didn’t put any personnel who was high-risk (in the classroom).”

The numbers came from a survey of school boards conducted May 25, which found that 19 students and 22 staff members were infected. Twelve of the province’s 72 school boards did not offer up data.

News of the outbreak came as Quebec reported another 530 cases of the virus on Friday, pushing its total above the 50,000 mark. The death toll climbed by 61 to 4,363.

In Ontario, meanwhile, where officials said the case count had surged to 27,210 and a total of 2,230 people had died, Premier Doug Ford said he was looking at reopening regionally.

“The reality on the ground is different in every part of the province,” Ford said.

Two-thirds of the province’s cases are in the Greater Toronto Area, while some other public health agencies say they have few or no current patients.

New Brunswick, which didn’t report any new cases of the virus for the two weeks leading up to May 21, continued to experience a setback on Friday. Officials there are now working their way through a web of people who may have been infected by a health-care worker who did not self-isolate upon his return from a trip to Quebec.

Health officials announced three additional cases in the region on Thursday, bringing the total of cases in the cluster to six, including the health-care worker at the Campbellto­n Regional Hospital. One of the new patients also works in health care.

“Based on the contact tracing and the testing that we are doing, we will see more cases,” said Dr. Jennifer Russell, the chief health officer.

The province’s Vitalite Health Network issued a statement saying the worker had come into contact with dozens of people at the hospital, including 50 employees. The outbreak forced the adjournmen­t of the provincial legislatur­e Thursday and caused officials to delay a new phase of the recovery plan by a week.

News from the provinces came as Statistics Canada announced gross domestic product fell at an annualized rate of 8.2 per cent in the first three months of 2020 — the worst quarterly showing since 2009 — even though efforts to contain the novel coronaviru­s by shuttering businesses and schools didn’t begin in earnest until March.

Many of those businesses are now reopening in a bid to re-employ some of the three million people who lost their jobs, putting workers and clients in close proximity and lending new urgency to the testing and tracing process.

Ottawa announced new efforts meant to guide the country through the pandemic, including an additional $650 million for First Nations, Inuit and Metis communitie­s. That adds to $305 million the feds had previously promised.

“Although we’ve made progress, there are still communitie­s that are not properly equipped to handle a COVID-19 outbreak,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said. “We need to address that.”

The new money will go toward hiring nurses and purchasing specialize­d supplies, enhancing an on-reserve income assistance program and building 12 new shelters for Indigenous women and girls fleeing violence.

Alberta took a different tack to slowing the viral spread, announcing plans to issue masks to the masses — with a fast-casual caveat.

Starting next month, the provincial government will begin handing out 20 million nonmedical masks through A&W, McDonald’s and Tim Hortons drive-thrus.

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