The Daily Courier

Quebec pork plant outbreak grows as Alberta looks to boost ailing travel industry

- By LAUREN KRUGEL

ACOVID-19 outbreak at a Quebec pork processing plant grew Thursday as Manitoba expanded its restrictio­ns and Alberta announced a testing pilot at two internatio­nal border crossings that it hopes will eventually boost its ailing travel industry.

Olymel says 62 workers at its plant southeast of Quebec City have tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s.

The union representi­ng plant workers is calling for a temporary closure, but the company said it is following guidance from public health officials who have not recommende­d a shutdown.

One worker died following a positive test result, but public health officials are working to determine whether it was due to the novel coronaviru­s.

The province hardest-hit by COVID-19 recorded 1,033 new cases in its Thursday update and 20 additional deaths. Five hundred and fifty three people are in hospital, including 101 in intensive care.

Premier Francois Legault said chances are slim restaurant­s in Quebec’s largest cities will be allowed to reopen this month as the province continue to report quadruple-digit daily case increases.

Montreal and Quebec City have been under a 28-day partial lockdown since Oct. 1.

“At this time, we need to reduce even the risk of contact because we cannot afford to continue having about 1,000 new cases every day,” Legault told reporters.

Manitoba reported four COVID19 fatalities on Thursday in its deadliest day yet.

Dr. Brent Roussin, the chief provincial public health officer, announced 147 new cases — 87 in Winnipeg, where more restrictio­ns on restaurant­s, pubs and gathering sizes came into effect this week.

He said those limits will also apply to the northern health region and Churchill starting next week. Extra measures are being put in place for schools in the Winnipeg area and the north starting Monday, including cancelling field trips, banning choirs and wind instrument­s and requiring substitute teachers to wear medical masks.

Manitoba’s daily test positivity rate is up to 5.6 per cent.

“We have to change things. We fell back on the fundamenta­ls,” Roussin said. “We got back to all that normalcy that we want, but we just know this is what happens when we attempt that.”

Also Thursday, the European Union’s council reimposed a travel ban on Canada as it battles a second wave of the pandemic, reversing a decision in June that lifted entry restrictio­ns on a number of non-EU countries.

In Alberta, Premier Jason Kenney announced a joint federalpro­vincial pilot project that will enable internatio­nal travellers reentering Canada via the Calgary Internatio­nal Airport and Coutts land border crossing from Montana to avoid a full 14-day quarantine.

Instead, they would only have to isolate for a matter of days.

The pilot is to begin on Nov. 2 and is open to asymptomat­ic travellers returning to Canada who are Canadian citizens, permanent residents or foreign nationals permitted to enter Canada.

“Though a lot of work lies ahead, we can see a return to normal travel,” said Kenney. “The results will help shape provincial and federal policy and ultimately they’ll help to find a new approach for internatio­nal travel.”

Those who voluntaril­y partici

pate will receive a COVID-19 test upon entry into Canada before proceeding into quarantine. If it’s negative, they can leave, as long as they promise to get tested six or seven days later at a pharmacy.

Participan­ts will also be subject to daily symptoms checks and must wear masks in public places and avoid visiting high-risk groups.

Anyone who chooses not to get a test would still have to quarantine for two weeks.

Kenney said the provincial tourism industry has suffered a 63 per cent drop in spending this year.

He also noted that three per cent of the province’s active cases were acquired through travel.

“We must find ways to bring back safe travel if we’re ever going to get the economy firing again on all cylinders.”

Kenney made his remarks by phone as he continues to self-isolate at home. The premier tested negative for the novel coronaviru­s on Wednesday but said he will remain in isolation for another week.

Kenney attended events with Municipal Affairs Minister Tracy Allard, who contracted COVID-19 last week.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said his government is keeping a “sharp eye” on the Alberta border pilot project.

“I’d be open to it, but I just first want to see what’s happening in Calgary,” he said, noting Pearson Internatio­nal Airport in Toronto gets far more volume and internatio­nal traffic.

Ontario reported 841 new cases of COVID-19 Thursday as two more Toronto hospitals declared outbreaks.

Canada’s most populous province also recorded nine more deaths from the virus and had a daily test positivity rate of 2.5 per cent.

Two hundred and seventy people are in hospital, including 74 in intensive care and 48 on ventilator­s.

The Scarboroug­h Health Network said six patients were infected in one unit at its general hospital, and the University Health Network said it was dealing with an outbreak involving four patients at the Toronto Rehabilita­tion Institute.

St. Michael’s Hospital, St. Joseph’s Health Centre, Toronto Western Hospital and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health have also declared outbreaks among staff or patients.

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Alberta Premier Jason Kenney appears at a news conference in Calgary, Alta.
The Canadian Press Alberta Premier Jason Kenney appears at a news conference in Calgary, Alta.
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facility in Anjou,
The Canadian Press The Olymel Montreal. facility in Anjou,

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