Rechercher dans ce blog

Saturday, July 31, 2021

Quilting a happy place for Vanessa Génier - Toronto Star

Vanessa Génier finds her happy place in quilting.

Génier, 41, is a Missanabie Cree First Nation member born in Leaf Rapids, Manitoba, and now living in Timmins.

She recently started the Quilts for survivors group that sends quilts to residential school survivors across Canada.

Génier has been quilting for more than 30 years. She started when she was nine thanks to a neighbour who showed her how to quilt. At the age of 15, she got a sewing machine for Christmas that has served her for 20 years.

Quilting for Génier is her happy place and a stress reliever.

“Everyone has an outlet, everyone should have a hobby or something that they do that just brings them joy. And that’s what quilting does,” she says. “I love picking out patterns… I just love the process. And then I love it when I give it to someone… And I like to see the progress of where I started and where I’ve come.”

Throughout her life, Génier has worked as a teacher, a finance clerk at the Timmins Native Friendship Centre, a Tupperware consultant as well as at A&W, Pita Pit and Michaels.

Now, she works as a bookkeeper at JMB Consulting and she loves the job, crediting her boss for good leadership skills and constructive criticism allowing Génier to learn and grow.

This spring, she received a bachelor’s degree in business administration with a major in accounting from Yorkville University.

“I’m 41. And I just graduated from university,“ she says. ”Anyone can do it. If you put your mind where you really want it, you can do anything.“

After she finished high school, she taught at a Christian school in Weagamow First Nation for a year and left the reserve to get married. With her first husband, she had three kids.

Génier is a domestic violence survivor. She left her first husband because of domestic abuse.

“Whether you stay or whether you leave, it’s your choice. No one can make that choice for you. And there’s no right or wrong choice,” Génier shares insight. “It’s in your hands. It’s not up to him or up to the family. There’s no right or wrong choice. It’s just you make the choice that’s best for you.”

She also experienced sexual abuse when she was a child. When she was 13, her mother gave advice that helped her. She told Génier she had to forgive so she could move on and not have to carry that around for the rest of her life.

From her second marriage, Génier had two children. Her second husband left the family in March 2020.

Génier says she doesn’t harbour resentment towards her ex-husbands and she tries not to talk ill of them to her kids.

“I tried to tell them the good stories so that they can have at least some positive memories of their dads,” she says. “And when they grow up, they can make their own decision how their relationship is going to go.”

It was her “sheer determination” along with lots of help and support from her family that helped her as she was going through a divorce amid the pandemic, juggling work and kids who were learning from home.

Her children’s birthdays are very important to Génier. Usually, they invite the family over, decorate the whole house, have dinner, presents and cake. She tries to make their birthdays fun and meaningful to let the kids know they’re loved, cherished and valued in the family.

“Because it’s the one day a year that’s just for them. This is the day that we honour you and your arrival into our family. And for whatever reason the Creator put you in our family at the time you were born for a specific purpose,” she says. “And I try to help them to remember that and birthdays are a really big deal at my house.”

Growing up, Génier was homeschooled by her mother and didn’t go to school until she was 12. At home, she learned a lot about cooking, baking and how to take care of the house.

Génier says she’s always been like an entrepreneur. When she was about seven or eight, she started a rock painting business where she would collect rocks, paint them and sell the rocks to other kids. Together with her brother, she would also make cookies and walk around the neighbourhood selling them.

She also used to volunteer ever since she was little.

Génier taught Sunday school and was involved with a yearbook committee at her school.

When she was 15, she went to Paris, France, with a mission group for eight weeks. They were taught how to mime to different songs to share the gospel with people. The following summer, she went to the Summer Olympics in Atlanta where she was involved in outreach activities for three weeks. The next summer, she worked at a Bible camp in Manitoba.

Génier says she’s an Indigenous spiritual woman who believes in the Creator.

“Some of my views have changed as I was able to learn more about my culture and my traditions. Not a lot but they’ve just been tweaked,” she says. “And I just see things a little bit differently. But I always did. Even as a young person, I would question the elders in the church about things.”

In 2018, she organized the first Women’s Holiday Extravaganza.

“It was just a place where women could come and just feel proud to be a woman because sometimes it’s really hard for women,” Gènier says. The second annual event was held as a fundraiser for the local women’s shelter. There was an inspirational female speaker, live music, door prizes and draws. Génier had lots of plans for the 2020 event but the pandemic disrupted them.

Génier has an optimistic and realistic outlook on life and hopes someday to be her own boss.

“I don’t give up. I’m a very determined person,” she says.

Adblock test (Why?)


Quilting a happy place for Vanessa Génier - Toronto Star
Read More

Indigenous performers to be featured Saturdays at Ontario Place music festival - CBC.ca

Indigenous performers are stepping into the spotlight Saturday evenings at Toronto's Ontario Place starting this week.

The Indigenous music concert series, which is co-curated by Elaine Bomberry and Ian Terry, is part of the Ontario Place Summer Live Music Festival.

"Indigenous musicians can create all kinds of music, we're not pigeon-holed into one genre," said Bomberry.

Bomberry, who is Anishinaabe and Cayuga from Six Nations of the Grand River Territory, is a performing arts activist, promoter, manager and TV and radio producer.

She is currently living on the Capilano reserve north of Vancouver with her husband, Juno award-winning Murray Porter from Six Nations. 

Bomberry said it feels good to know the live music world is opening up.

In selecting the artists, she wanted a balance of up-and-coming musicians as well as more seasoned ones. 

"I'm seeing more and more musicians becoming part of other concert series as well," she said. 

"If the musicians are that good they deserve to be showcased."

Elaine Bomberry is co-curating the Indigenous Music Concert Series. (Courtesy of Elaine Bomberry)

For five consecutive Saturdays, the series will feature Indigenous acts like 2nd Line Bluegrass Band, Nadjiwan and Cliff Cardinal and The Skylarks among others. Tickets are free.

David Lee, the artistic director of the Ontario Place Summer Live Music Festival and TU Jazz Fest, said they were looking to do a collaboration of music series in 2018 but COVID-19 ended up delaying that. 

This year the festival was able to resume.

"The first thing we wanted to do was put together an Indigenous music series," said Lee. 

The Ontario Place Summer Live Music Festival runs until Sept. 6. All 38 shows will also be streamed live on the Toronto Undergraduate Jazz Festival's Facebook page.

Adblock test (Why?)


Indigenous performers to be featured Saturdays at Ontario Place music festival - CBC.ca
Read More

COMMENTARY: No, it’s not the governor general’s place to deny an election call - Global News

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh is absolutely correct in his assessment that a federal election this year is wholly unnecessary. Singh, however, is very much mistaken in his belief that Canada’s new Governor General should do something about it.

And, frankly, he should know better.

Amid widespread speculation that a fall election is looming, Singh has formally asked newly sworn-in Governor General Mary Simon to deny any request from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to dissolve Parliament and thrust the country into a campaign. He maintains that this minority Parliament is functioning just fine and that there is no reason for Canadians to go to the polls right now.

Read more: Fall election likely as Trudeau bets big on COVID-19 rebound, reopening, sources say

Again, that is a valid point but it’s hardly something worth promoting a constitutional crisis over. If indeed Trudeau and the Liberals are prepared to call an early election based solely on narrow partisan interests, then it is up to Canadian voters to decide whether that is deserving of punishment. This is a matter to be resolved democratically.

Singh also notes the fact that Canada has fixed election date legislation, and that an election two years after the last one would fly in the face of that legislation. It should be noted, however, that the legislation is rather specific on an important point: “Nothing in this section affects the powers of the Governor General, including the power to dissolve Parliament at the Governor General’s discretion.”

Again, if Canadians feel as though the Liberals have wrongly flouted that law, then an election is an ideal opportunity to hold them accountable for that (as arguably happened to Alberta’s incumbent government in 2015).

It is true that the Governor General, as the Queen’s representative in Canada, holds the power to dissolve Parliament; hence the need for the prime minister to pay a visit to Rideau Hall in the first place. There is, however, a fairly well-established convention as to the circumstances under which a Governor General might use that discretion.

As Carleton University professor and noted Westminister system expert Philippe Lagassé notes in a blog post, “a dissolution can be refused if an election has recently taken place, say within the past 9-12 months, and there’s another viable government among the parties in the House of Commons.”

Read more: COVID-19 no longer top issue facing Canadians ahead of possible election, poll finds

University of Waterloo professor and constitutional expert Emmett MacFarlane makes another important point in all of this: eroding the governor general’s neutrality and non-partisan nature would be “fundamentally undemocratic.”

It’s not just Singh who’s trying to advance this flawed narrative about the Governor General as the election referee. Former Green Party leader Elizabeth May went even further by suggesting that there’s some burden of proof here that the prime minister must demonstrate or evidence that he must present, as though the Governor General is the judge in some theoretical election call courtroom.

It’s absurd. There’s been more than enough in the last few years to tarnish and undermine the position of Governor General. It’s not helpful to have prominent national politicians demanding that our new Governor General — who hopefully can restore some dignity and prestige to the position — do something she really has no business doing.

Assuming the prime minister does call an election this year, we’ll have a significant number of Canadians who will be left with the impression that the Governor General somehow failed in her mythical duty to put him in his place.

Trudeau’s response to all of this was to simply regurgitate talking points about how the opposition parties are being difficult and uncooperative, arguments that seem pre-emptively aimed at blunting any criticism about an unnecessary election campaign.

Ultimately, Canadians will sort this all out whenever we eventually go to the polls. In the meantime, let’s leave the Governor General out of it.

Rob Breakenridge is host of “Afternoons with Rob Breakenridge” on Global News Radio 770 Calgary and a commentator for Global News.

Click to play video: 'Polls: Conservative support crumbling in Western Canada' Polls: Conservative support crumbling in Western Canada
Polls: Conservative support crumbling in Western Canada

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Adblock test (Why?)


COMMENTARY: No, it’s not the governor general’s place to deny an election call - Global News
Read More

Friday, July 30, 2021

Province outlines plans for new Ontario Place - GuelphMercury.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Province outlines plans for new Ontario Place  GuelphMercury.com
  2. Beaches, zip lines, concerts: Ford unveils Ontario Place plans but cost and timeline unclear  The Globe and Mail
  3. Ontario Place to be redeveloped as year-round theme park; Cinesphere, pods to be preserved  Toronto Star
  4. Redevelopment of Toronto’s Ontario Place set to include 3 new attractions  Global News
  5. Future Ontario Place to feature water and adventure parks, revamped concert venue  CBC.ca
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

Province outlines plans for new Ontario Place - GuelphMercury.com
Read More

Beaches, zip lines, concerts: Ford unveils Ontario Place plans but cost and timeline unclear - The Globe and Mail

Visions for the new Ontario Place include eight acres of free, publicly accessible gathering spaces, outdoor gardens and public beaches.

Therme Canada

The Ontario government has unveiled a plan to revitalize Ontario Place that includes an expanded year-round music venue, zip-lines, a spa-waterpark and a new public beach. But it remains unclear how much this vision will cost the province to realize, and how much visitors will need to pay in admission fees when it finally opens.

After the government engaged in nearly two years of closed-door talks with bidders over redevelopment plans for the provincially owned Toronto waterfront site, Premier Doug Ford officially announced the winners on Friday at a windy rooftop event, with Ontario Place’s well-known Cinesphere IMAX theatre as the backdrop.

As previously reported by The Globe and Mail, the chosen companies are the Quebec outdoor recreation firm Écorécréo, the Austrian spa and waterpark provider Therme and Beverly Hills, Calif.-based concert promoter Live Nation, whose Canadian arm runs the site’s existing outdoor live-music venue.

“This will be a public place for everyone to come and experience, and it will stay that way,” Mr. Ford said, stressing that the land will be leased and not sold off. “It will once again be the world-class destination that it was always meant to be.”

Mr. Ford had made the site a personal priority. His government restarted a process seeking private-sector proposals for Ontario Place in 2019, after a similar process under the previous Liberal government ran out of time before the 2018 election. According to the government, the revitalized Ontario Place will attract millions of visitors annually once work is complete later this decade.

On Friday, the winning firms offered more detail on their plans. Live Nation pledged to expand its existing concert venue. The enlarged performance space would hold 20,000 people for outdoor events but also convert into a 9,000-seat facility for the winter. Écorécréo, which operates a pirate-themed attraction in Montreal, is planning a new climbing park and an aerial obstacle course.

Therme is promising both a family-friendly waterpark and an adults-only spa, along with botanical gardens. Its plans also include a sandy beach that it says will be open to the public and free to visit. The company says the project will cost it $350-million, the biggest part of the $500-million the government says will be invested by the private sector at Ontario Place.

Toronto city councillor Joe Cressy, in whose ward Ontario Place lies, said the choices felt like “design by committee,” and that there was no indication of how the disparate parts would be stitched together to ensure the entire site works as a cohesive package.

“This is not a casino or a mega-mall, so it could have been worse,” he said, referring to proposals for the city’s waterfront Mr. Ford floated a decade ago when he was a city councillor and his brother, the late Rob Ford, was mayor. “But ‘could have been worse’ is not an acceptable policy for revitalizing public land.”

Mr. Cressy also criticized the lack of public consultation, a complaint that has been echoed by the advocacy group Ontario Place for All and the Opposition NDP at Queen’s Park.

The government says it now plans to launch public consultations to shape the new site. Mr. Ford defended the move to announce first and consult later, saying his government and its predecessors had heard plenty from the public about what they did not want at Ontario Place – such as a casino or condos – and his government listened.

Ontario Place was home to an amusement park before the provincial government shuttered those parts of the grounds in 2012. Much of the 50-year-old site, on artificial islands on Toronto’s Lake Ontario shoreline, is now showing its age. The rooftops of its futuristic-looking “pods,” which are suspended above the lake’s surface, are choked with weeds. The white paint on the catwalk guardrails is peeling or flecked with rust. The Cinesphere’s golf-ball-like dome, formerly bright white, is now grey and dull. Not far from where the Premier spoke on Friday lie the smashed remains of a snack bar, where a once-illuminated Coca-Cola sign lies on its side.

While the government has committed to keeping the pods and the Cinesphere in place, none of the bidders intend to use them or refurbish them. Heritage Minister Lisa MacLeod said the government was exploring having the Ontario Science Centre use them for programming.

Local activists have been pushing for an Ontario Place that has more public space people can use without having to pay.

Since the closing of the amusement park, the William G. Davis Trail on the site has been well used, as has the new Trillium Park on its east side. The government also promised to preserve these features, and Therme says it plans to refurbish the trail while keeping it accessible to the public.

Therme is promising to set aside about 3.2 hectares for free, public outdoor space, which the company says is 40 per cent of its portion of the overall site. The 3.2 hectares represents about a 20th of the total area of Ontario Place.

The site as a whole will first require substantial investment in soil remediation and utility work, both of which Queen’s Park has promised to fund. Under the Liberals, that cost was pegged at $100-million. Mr. Ford had no updated figure to share Friday morning.

“Well, I can’t give you an exact figure, but what we’re doing is putting a lot of money into it to keep the costs lower for everyone, to be inclusive,” he said.

Some construction could begin this year, the government says, though it acknowledges the best-case scenario is that it will be six to nine years before the public is able to use the new facilities. Toronto Mayor John Tory called the announcement “a very, very important beginning.”

It was also unclear how much money people will have to pay to enjoy these attractions, each of which will operate independently and could require a separate entrance fee. Mr. Ford suggested the price could be similar to going to the Toronto Zoo, which costs $28 plus tax for an adult.

In an interview, Anne-Marie Garner, Therme Group’s vice-president of corporate strategy, said admission prices had not been finalized. However, she said adults would be able to enter the spa for “under $40.”

Three companies have been selected to redevelop the Ontario Place theme park on Toronto’s waterfront, with plans for year-round attractions including a larger concert venue, pools, gardens and an adventure park. The Canadian Press

Our Morning Update and Evening Update newsletters are written by Globe editors, giving you a concise summary of the day’s most important headlines. Sign up today.

Adblock test (Why?)


Beaches, zip lines, concerts: Ford unveils Ontario Place plans but cost and timeline unclear - The Globe and Mail
Read More

Early morning fire at Lethbridge’s Two Guys and A Pizza Place deemed suspicious - Global News

Though the fire was out, the smell of smoke was still in the air outside Two Guys and A Pizza Place in Lethbridge late Friday morning.

Troy Hicks, a fire prevention officer with the City of Lethbridge Fire Prevention Bureau, said the 911 call came in around 5 a.m.

Firefighters from four stations responded to the active fire and had it out about an hour and a half later.

While an investigation is underway, Hicks said one thing is already clear: the fire is being considered suspicious.

Read more: Police investigate 2 suspicious fires at the same home in East Preston

“I can say that this is a suspicious fire that happened in the back of this alley,” he said.

It’s not the first suspicious fire in Lethbridge in recent weeks. On July 15, the Lethbridge Police Service said five suspicious fires were being investigated on the south side of the city. Only a day later, they added another to the list.

Hicks said it’s too early to link any of the fires, but did ask for the public’s help.

“There’s no such thing as something that’s a ridiculous point to pass on to us,” he said. “So if anyone ever sees something, whether it’s in a case like (Two Guys and A Pizza Place), or grass fires, or alley fires, please reach out, let us know.”

Read more: String of suspected Nanaimo arsons prompts warning from RCMP, firefighters

Friday’s fire at Two Guys and A Pizza Place resulted in an estimated $100,000 in damages. But Hicks added there was some good news.

“One thing I can say that makes me unbelievably happy is once again, it’s another business and they do have insurance and insurance has already been involved,” he said. “I can’t reiterate the importance of whether you’re a business owner, a homeowner, a renter — accidents happen; fires happen — and insurance is so important.”

The owner of Two Guys and A Pizza Place turned down a request for an interview but did want to extend his thanks to everyone who is helping get the doors back open. For now, there is no timeline of when that will be.

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Adblock test (Why?)


Early morning fire at Lethbridge’s Two Guys and A Pizza Place deemed suspicious - Global News
Read More

Indoor masking to remain in place when Ontario exits COVID-19 reopening roadmap - CP24 Toronto's Breaking News

The Ontario government is providing the clearest picture so far of what restrictions will look like once the province exits its reopening roadmap plan following the lengthy COVID-19 lockdown and masks will remain a part of the landscape.

Ontario is currently in Step Three of the provincial reopening plan, which allows virtually all business places to operate with some capacity restrictions.

“Upon exiting the Roadmap, the vast majority of public health measures, including capacity limits, will be lifted. Only a small number of measures will remain in place, including the requirement for passive screening, such as posting a sign, and businesses requiring a safety plan,” a spokesperson for Health Minister Christine Elliott said Friday.

“As the Delta variant is the dominant strain in Ontario, which is not the case with some other provinces, face coverings will also continue to be required for indoor public settings.”

It’s been seven weeks since Ontario began the reopening process with Step One on June 11. The province entered Step Two a month ago on June 30 and Step Three two weeks ago on July 16.

The Ford government has said that Ontario will remain in Step Three for at least 21 days and until 80 per cent of those 12 and over have received one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 75 per cent are fully vaccinated.

About 68.4 per cent of Ontarians 12 and up are now fully vaccinated, while 80.2 have had at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose.

The province has also stipulated that each public health unit must have at least 70 per cent of its eligible population aged 12 and over fully vaccinated – a milestone Toronto announced Friday that it has now reached – and that other key public health and health care indicators must remain stable.

 

NEXT STEP COULD COME ‘WITHIN A COUPLE OF WEEKS’

No specific date has been set for when the province will exit step three, though Premier Doug Ford told reporters Friday that while he won’t commit to a date, it could happen by around mid-August.  

“Whenever we hit those main targets, and we'll hit them, honestly probably in a couple of weeks maybe sooner,” Ford said. “But we just have to get those vaccinations, out there and hit our 75 per cent target.”

While there is no hard date, Elliot's office said Friday that it is sharing more details about what the exit step will look like “to provide clarity to businesses and the people of Ontario in advance of exiting the Roadmap.”

At the exit step, capacity limits will be lifted for all sectors, as well as for social gatherings and public events.

Restaurants will still have to maintain distance of two metres between patrons, or separate them with a barrier such as plexiglass and collect names and contact information for patrons.

Masks will also still have to be worn in workplaces where physical distancing cannot be maintained.

 

SOME JURISDICTIONS DROPPING MASKS WHILE OTHERS BRING THEM BACK

The decision to keep masking in place comes as some jurisdictions, such as Alberta, move to do away with some key measures.

Alberta announced Wednesday that it is dropping its mask mandate, along with almost all of its pandemic restrictions. Those who test positive for COVID-19 will no longer have to isolate, nor will close contacts be notified.

Asked earlier Friday about whether Ontario might follow suit, Ford told reporters Ontario will continue on course with masks for the time being.

“That's up to Premier Kenny to decide,” Ford said, commenting on Alberta’s move. “We're gonna stay vigilant here. We're gonna make sure that we continue with the masks and what's going to get us out of this is one thing; it’s vaccinations. Simple as that, we need to continue hitting our target.”

Some infectious disease specialists have called Alberta’s plan “risky” and have said that a fourth wave in the fall is likely, especially given the dominance of the more infectious Delta variant.

“What they're doing in Alberta, a lot of it makes sense, it's just that it's way too early to do that,” infectious disease specialist Dr. Alon Vaisman told CP24. “It's something that we would probably be doing a little bit down the road, but given where they're at now – the case counts rising – it's very early to be withdrawing those kind of restrictions in the era of the Delta variant.”

The Ministry of Health said that the requirement to continue masking indoors “is consistent with other jurisdictions” such as Quebec and Israel and also is in line with recently updated guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control that fully vaccinated people begin wearing masks indoors again in locations with high COVID-19 transmission rates.

While many jurisdictions in the U.S. had done away with masking, cases have begun to surge in many areas, prompting the CDC to reverse course on its advice.

Exceptions to Ontario’s masking requirements will remain in place for medical conditions, children younger than two years old and other special circumstances, though people will not have to provide proof.

Ontario reported 226 cases of COVID-19 on Friday, along with 11 more deaths. The province’s rolling seven-day average also increased for the third consecutive week, reaching 170.

Adblock test (Why?)


Indoor masking to remain in place when Ontario exits COVID-19 reopening roadmap - CP24 Toronto's Breaking News
Read More

Redevelopment of Toronto’s Ontario Place set to include 3 new attractions - Global News

The revitalization of Ontario Place in Toronto is set to involve three new attractions, including a redevelopment of the existing amphitheatre, an adventure park, as well as a destination of parkland, water slides, and botanical spaces.

The provincial government made the announcement Friday, having selected three companies from the 2019 Call for Development process.

Construction is not expected to be completed until sometime between 2027 and 2030.

“We have identified development partners who will help us revitalize Ontario Place into a world-class, year-round destination for all Ontarians,” Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Culture Industries Minister Lisa MacLeod said at a morning press conference.

Read more: Provincial government set to make announcement about Toronto’s Ontario Place

According to a news release from the province, Therme Group is set to build a family-friendly, all-season location “offering something for all ages,” including water slides, pools, botanical gardens, and eight acres of publicly accessible parkland and beaches.

Live Nation is set to redevelop the existing amphitheatre into a “year-round indoor-outdoor live music and performance venue.” The venue will have an expanded capacity of 20,000 in the summer and almost 9,000 in the winter. Existing lawns will be protected.

Lastly, officials said Écorécréo Group was selected to build an “affordable all-season adventure park” for all ages, including obstacle courses, ziplines, climbing walls and escape rooms.

“From aquatic activities, botanical gardens, and a year-round event venue, to an affordable all-season family-friendly adventure park, Ontario Place will be a premier tourism destination once again,” Premier Doug Ford said.

Handout / Ontario Government. Handout / Ontario Government

None of the Ontario Place lands will include casinos or condos, and the land will not be sold, the government said. The destination will be open to the public all year round.

Specific entrance fees to the Therme and Écorécréo Group locations were unclear as of Friday.

“Hopefully, what I’m being told is it’ll be no more than going to the zoo, for example. So we have to keep it affordable for all families to come here,” Ford said.

Meanwhile, the iconic Cinesphere and pod complex will remain at the site and are expected to begin undergoing repairs in December.

“The province will also work with the Ontario Science Centre to explore opportunities to have science-related tourism and educational programming at the Cinesphere and pod complex,” the news release said.

In the meantime, the Cinesphere, which has operated as a cinema, is expected to remain open, as will other parts of the site.

Live Nation will redevelop the existing amphitheatre. Handout

Trillium Park and William G. Davis Trail will be integrated into the redevelopment and will continue to be accessible throughout the remediation process. The marina will also be included in the revitalized site.

The province said the government will be holding the next phase of public consultations through a website launching next month and virtual information sessions in the fall.

“As the redevelopment moves forward, public input will be critical to support the planning and development of the site,” the news release said.

“Mark Saunders, special advisor for Ontario Place, will continue to engage with the City of Toronto, Indigenous communities, project stakeholders, businesses and community groups that have interest in the Ontario Place site to ensure all perspectives on these important proposals are recognized and considered.”

Chief R. Stacey Laforme of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation attended Friday’s announcement.

“The Mississaugas see the redevelopment of Ontario Place as a significant and visible opportunity to provide education, promote reconciliation, and talk about the value of nature and mother Earth,” Laforme said.

The project is not expected to be completed until sometime between 2027 and 2030. Handout

“We’re honoured to play a role in the future of this adventure and pleased to be a part of the collaboration.”

Officials said 3,600 jobs will be created as a result of the redevelopment and once completed, an estimated five to seven million visitors per year are expected.

The exact cost of the construction process for the provincial government has not yet been revealed, but officials said that once completed, the redeveloped Ontario Place is expected to yield revenue for the province, with the province acting as a landlord.

An estimated $500 million of private-sector investment will also go into the redevelopment project.

Click to play video: 'Premier Ford unveils redevelopment plans of Ontario Place' Premier Ford unveils redevelopment plans of Ontario Place
Premier Ford unveils redevelopment plans of Ontario Place

“The revitalization of Ontario Place has been a long time coming — too long — but sometimes it’s like saying good food takes time,” Toronto Mayor John Tory said.

“Maybe to get it right you have to spend the time to do it and there’s more time yet to come. There’s a long way to go in this process, but today marks a very, very important beginning.”

Located south of Lake Shore Boulevard West and Exhibition Place, Ontario Place opened in 1971 but was shuttered in 2012 due to falling revenues and tight provincial finances. At that time, the government said attendance fell to about 300,000 from a peak of around 2.5 million.

The Cinesphere was renovated in recent years and continues to operate year-round, showcasing films. Also, a 240-slip marina is open for use between May and October. More recently, the site has hosted festivals and drive-in events.

— with files from Nick Westoll

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Adblock test (Why?)


Redevelopment of Toronto’s Ontario Place set to include 3 new attractions - Global News
Read More

Cambridge Bay elders' gathering place vandalized - Nunatsiaq News

‘Every time we have an issue like that, it sets you back emotionally,’ says the hamlet’s CAO

A gathering place for Cambridge Bay’s elders was trashed on Tuesday when vandals ripped doors off their hinges, threw eggs on the walls and splattered paint on leather couches, other furniture and the floor.

As well, cabinets were broken, food from cupboards and the fridge were strewn on the ground and the Anglican Church next door had graffiti spraypainted on its walls.

The hamlet’s staff found the mess at the Elders Palace — a community space that hosts events, classes for elders and camps — during their building checks at around 7 a.m., said Cambridge Bay’s chief administrative officer, Marla Limousin.

RCMP got involved and caught the minors they believe did it. The young people were in the centre all day Wednesday cleaning up the mess, Limousin said.

“That was good. They were accountable for it,” she said.

“I think lots of lessons were learned in that.… You have to see people, you know, it’s not a blank empty space.”

Vandalism has been a problem in the hamlet, said Limousin.

Last week there was a fire in the electronics section of the hamlet’s dump that caused a big fire that let off black, toxic smoke. Arson is the suspected cause of the fire, Limousin said.

And last year, elders “were in tears,” said Limousin, after an elder’s camp, called Annana’s Camp, was vandalized.

Last week a fire broke out in the hamlet’s dump’s electronic section, which let off a thick, black smoke. (Screenshot from the Hamlet of Cambridge Bay/Facebook)

“As a municipality, we try to bring things and make things and create spaces for people to enjoy. And every time we have an issue like that, it sets you back emotionally, but it also sets you back financially.”

And those were just a few examples — vandals also attempted to break into the community’s art studio and a gazebo that was built for residential school survivors, Limousin said.

“You can’t make everything bulletproof in a community,” she said. “It’s just getting too much and we as a community need to deal with it,” she said.

Adblock test (Why?)


Cambridge Bay elders' gathering place vandalized - Nunatsiaq News
Read More

Future Ontario Place to feature water and adventure parks, revamped concert venue - CBC.ca

The new Ontario Place will include an indoor waterpark and spa, a revamped concert venue and an "adventure park," the province announced on Friday.

It said the site's most iconic features and greenspace will be preserved.

Three companies were selected for the redevelopment, including Austrian company Therme — which specializes in waterparks and spas — as well the Quebec outdoor recreation firm Écorécréo. 

The third company, Live Nation, already operates the existing music venues on site.

The trio will "help deliver an exciting, inclusive and family friendly experience that will play a key role in the province's post-pandemic recovery, both as a tourism destination and as a display of Ontario's strong cultural identity," the province said in a news release.

Some details of the highly-anticipated redevelopment plan were shared at a morning news conference that included Ontario Premier Doug Ford, Culture Minister Lisa MacLeod, Toronto Mayor John Tory, and Chief R. Stacey Laforme of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation.

"As we mark the 50th anniversary of Ontario Place this year, there is no better time to bring this iconic destination back to life," Ford said in the release. Ontario Place first opened in 1972, but was closed in 2012 after years of declining attendance.

Still, the province said it will be preserving many of the "key heritage and recreational features" of Ontario Place, including the Cinephere, the pod complex, the marina, Trillium Park and the William G. Davis Trail.

The government said it is committed to working with the Ontario Science Centre to have science-related tourism and educational programming at the Cinesphere and pods.

Up to 5M visitors expected each year

Therme will build an "all-season destination offering something for all ages, including pools, waterslides, botanical spaces to relax, as well as sports performance and recovery services," per the release.

Details about costs to visitors are still being finalized, a representative from Therme said at a morning briefing for the media. Officials expect access to be free for children three and under, while the price for individual adults will be around $40.

There will also be roughly eight acres of "free, publicly accessible" gathering spaces, parkland and gardens on the part of the property being leased by Therme, the province said.

The new adventure park will include about a dozen "aerial courses" with options for visitors of all ages.

Meanwhile, the revamped indoor/outdoor Budweiser Stage Amphitheatre will have room for up to 20,000 people in the summer and nearly 9,000 in the winter.

The province said it eventually expects the reopened Ontario Place to welcome up to five million visitors per year. The redevelopment will include up to $500-million in investments from the private sector, the province said, and could create up to 3,600 new jobs in the City of Toronto — though no details were provided about what those jobs might be.

Still a long road ahead

At the briefing, officials couldn't say how much capital investment from the province will be required for the redevelopment. The province says many more steps need to be completed before construction of the new amenities can begin in earnest — including a major site remediation and overhaul of existing infrastructure, which has not seen any upgrades in more than 20 years.

As for the timeline, a comprehensive environmental assessment is slated to begin in November, while modernization of the existing infrastructure is expected to start in December.

The province will then need to undertake an environmental and heritage review process that includes several rounds of further public consultation, which will start this fall and likely extend into 2023, officials said.

Construction on the planned amenities is scheduled to begin in 2024, with completion sometime in or before 2030, they added.

The public will be able to continue accessing Trillium Park and The William G. Davis trail throughout the redevelopment process, officials said. They could not say for certain if the Cinesphere, which was operating as a movie theatre before the COVID-19 pandemic, will stay open.

A request for proposals went out in 2019, and the winning bids were picked from more than 30 submissions, according to the province. It said it opted to work with a mix of companies since no plausible, site-wide proposals were submitted.

The province will be leasing the land, provincial officials said, given strong opposition to any sale of provincially-owned land. 

During public consultations for the development, the province heard repeatedly that it should prioritize public access to the waterfront and the preservation of heritage elements, officials said. There was strong opposition to any sale of the provincially-owned land, as well as the construction of condominiums and a casino, officials added.

Adblock test (Why?)


Future Ontario Place to feature water and adventure parks, revamped concert venue - CBC.ca
Read More

‘No place like home’ for contending Blue Jays - TSN

Columnist image

TORONTO — No matter how you break it down, one thing is certain: The Toronto Blue Jays have been gone far too long.

Twenty-two months.

Or maybe you prefer 670 days, the number that immediately crossed club president/CEO Mark Shapiro’s mind when he received word on July 16 that the Jays were being given permission by the federal government to hop the border and come home.

When the Jays take to the brand-new seamless turf at Rogers Centre on Friday night, they’ll look like a much, much different team than the one Toronto baseball fans last saw finishing off a 95-loss season on Sept. 29, 2019.

While debates can be had about how legitimate of a contender this club is down the stretch, they’re a contender nonetheless.

In the time this franchise has been gone from Toronto due to COVID-19 health restrictions, they’ve morphed from rebuilder to win-now in fairly quick fashion.

There are a lot of teams around baseball that would love a relatively small three-year down period, as the Jays went through from 2017-19.

When it comes to baseball rebuilds, that’s F1 speed.

Ask the Baltimore Orioles.

Since squaring off with the Jays — and losing, thanks to Edwin Encarnacion’s wild walk-off — in the 2016 wild-card game, they’ve gone on to finish 75-87, 47-115, 54-108, 25-35, and are currently 35-66 and well on their way to another top-three pick in next year’s draft.

There’s some impact talent on the way thanks to those finishes, sure, but it’s a rebuild that’s light years behind the Blue Jays’ quick turnaround.

With a group of elite, young talent that was quickly surrounded by marquee free-agent additions like Hyun Jin Ryu, handed $80 million in December of 2019 just prior to the pandemic, and George Springer, lured for a franchise-record $150 million in January, Jays fans are in for a treat.

It may not end the way they hope simply because winning rings is very, very hard to do, but the entertainment value when the Jays finally return home Friday night for their traditional 7:07 p.m. first pitch is off the charts.

With a deep farm system and more financial resources expected to be poured into the roster this winter, this franchise is as healthy as it's been since Joe Carter was walking off Mitch Williams and the Philadelphia Phillies.

As the Jays wrapped up in Boston on Thursday night and made their way onto the charter to Toronto, it’s a sigh-of-relief moment for the entire club, one that hasn’t felt any sort of true homefield advantage in a long time.

While Ryu will have to wait until at least Tuesday to make his Toronto debut, Springer’s will without a doubt come Friday night against the Kansas City Royals.

“The fans,” Springer said of what he’s looking forward to most. “Everything. The fans are awesome. I can’t wait to hear the excitement, to see the excitement in the stands. Like we’ve said, there’s no place like home and we know where home is.”

It’s certain Rogers’ bottom line has been affected by the time away, but manager Charlie Montoyo’s group waded through the adversity to play pretty good baseball in their temporary Buffalo, then Dunedin, then Buffalo again digs over the past calendar year.

In 2020, they surged to a 17-9 mark at Sahlen Field, earning a spot in the expanded postseason with a 34-28 record.

This season, you could see the uncertainty and unenviable situations take a toll, but the Jays have battled to a 22-22 mark at TD Ballpark and Sahlen Field.

With division-rival Tampa so close to Dunedin and the Red Sox Nation entrenched up the road in Fort Myers, Fla., the early-season stint at their spring training ballpark was a tough one.

They were far too often the road team and heckled at home.

Bo Bichette is looking forward to one thing.

“Having a real homefield,” Bichette said. “Not a lot of people realize, but it really feels like we’ve been on the road for four months now. So to be able to kind of find a home and have our own fans in the stadium … when we’re playing the Red Sox and Yankees, we’re not wondering who’s going to be in the stands, we know it’s going to be Blue Jays fans. That will be big for us and hopefully we can take advantage of it.”

With Ryu starting Thursday’s important division game in Boston, 2020 trade deadline acquisition Ross Stripling will get the ball for the Jays on Friday.

“I don’t take that lightly at all,” Stripling said. “Like you said, a country that hasn’t seen live baseball in two years so a lot of people are going to be fired up and obviously we’re going to have some fans in the stands.

“Man, that place is going to be buzzing.”

The 10-game homestand that kicks off is a crucial one.

“As we were walking through the process, that was monumental,” Shapiro said. “That wasn’t small. It’s a 10-game homestand on July 30. That’s more than 25 per cent of our remaining games. That’s almost 10 per cent of our entire home schedule.

“To be able to get back in the heat of a race for playoffs for a crucial 10-game homestand — hopefully, after we’ve added to our team, as well, in the days leading up to that return — to me is about as big a competitive swing as you can possibly have.”

It will take time to digest everything that’s happened over the past year and a half, but there’s no doubt Friday — and the date July 30 — will be remembered for a long time.

Game 100 of the Jays’ 2021 campaign isn’t just another nine innings.

“I know it’s going to be special,” Shapiro said. “I’m not someone who tends to think about moments being symbolic or moments being big, I tend to think about the journey more than any individual moment. Yet, right after this decision was made, my thoughts did turn to what, potentially, July 30 could be and what it could mean. I’ve always kind of felt like baseball’s played a role in history, in the recovery from adversity and from challenges. Whether it’s wars, 9/11, different times, baseball seems to have been one of those symbols of continuity, of return to normalcy. I really feel like it’s going to be a celebratory moment for the country, for the city.”

And a night to remember for the lucky 15,000 that get to celebrate not only the return of Major League Baseball to Toronto, but a return to contention, too.​

Adblock test (Why?)


‘No place like home’ for contending Blue Jays - TSN
Read More

Ottawa's top doctor wants to see provincial mask mandates remain in place this fall - CTV News Ottawa

OTTAWA -- Ottawa's medical officer of health says she wants to see mask mandates remain in effect across Ontario even after the province moves out of Step 3 of its reopening plan.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, Dr. Vera Etches said she has spoken with Ontario's chief medical officer of health. Dr. Kieran Moore, about maintaining a province-wide mask mandate come fall.

"What I expect, going into the fall, is that (Ottawa) will continue to operate under provincial regulations and I'm speaking with our chief medical officer of health about continuing to include mask requirements for crowds," she said.

"My recommendation would be to have a province-wide approach," she added. "We're all connected and travel is increasing as people have that protection (from vaccines). It's one of those things that is under active conversation and consideration for the next step."

On Thursday, Ontario hit one of its benchmarks for moving beyond Step 3, but Health Minister Christine Elliott said there is still work to be done. The earliest Ontario can move past Step 3 is Aug. 6. 

Ottawa has a local mandatory mask bylaw that covers mask use in public places, but city staff say it will expire on Aug. 26, as local authorities have been following the provincial guidelines. The temporary mandatory mask bylaw was first enacted when there were no provincial regulations regarding mask use as a public health measure.

Etches says that although the Public Health Agency of Canada says small groups of fully vaccinated people do not require masks, they are still a helpful tool in larger groups or when the vaccination status of others is unknown.

"Often, we don't know the vaccination status of others in the workplace or others in a crowd," she said. "Masks, in particular, are a very useful tool to continue to keep transmission lower when you're indoors and in crowded places."

Aside from masks, however, Etches was unsure about what other restrictions she would want to see continue.

"I think this is part of what we need to monitor and assess: which of the measures are going to be the most effective and strike the right balance as we go into the fall," she said. "I'm not part of the public health measures table, but I know they have been looking at the evidence and the international experience around what is worth maintaining and, clearly, masks stand out as one of the practices that is helpful."

Etches said she is confident vaccine uptake combined with continued public health measures will help keep the worst effects of a possible fall resurgence in cases at bay. Moore has previously said he expects a rise in cases in the fall but Etches said she believes schools can remain open.

"Our way of handling exposure to COVID-19 in schools is changing because of vaccination. If you're vaccinated, even if you're exposed to somebody who is positive in the school environment, you won't have to go home to isolate for two weeks," she said. "I hope that can encourage people to head out this week, if you haven't already had your first dose or haven't had your second dose. You can walk in to any clinic."

Etches said Ottawa Public Health is also piloting a project that would allow someone who develops symptoms at school to return home with a take-home COVID-19 test if accessing testing is a challenge.

A full back-to-school plan from the provincial government is expected to be announced next week.

Adblock test (Why?)


Ottawa's top doctor wants to see provincial mask mandates remain in place this fall - CTV News Ottawa
Read More

Canadian Rosie MacLennan's Olympic reign ends with 4th-place finish in trampoline - CBC.ca

Trampolinist Rosie MacLennan has finished fourth in Tokyo, but will still go down as one of the sport's all-time greats.

The 32-year-old came to Tokyo looking to become the first Canadian athlete ever to win gold at three straight Olympics in an individual event. 

It was remarkable she was able to compete at all.

Nine weeks ago in training, MacLennan suffered a severely sprained ankle, according to CBC analyst Kyle Shewfelt, who won gymnastic gold at the 2004 Olympics in Athens.

She tore two ligaments and partially tore another, putting her trip to Tokyo in doubt, Shewfelt reported. The injury had not been disclosed before Friday's competition.

Shewfelt said he promised MacLennan he wouldn't disclose the injury until after she made the final.

Bring on the cheers

Find live streams, must-watch video highlights, breaking news and more in one perfect Olympic Games package. Following Team Canada has never been easier or more exciting.

More from Tokyo 2020

MacLennan still managed to put on dazzling display of acrobatics, soaring to breathtaking heights that brought gasps from the small smatterings of team officials and guests inside of Tokyo's Ariake Gymnastics Centre.

China's Zhu Xueying (56.635 points) and Liu Lingling (56.350) took gold and silver, respectively, while Great Britain's Bryony Page (55.735) earned bronze.

MacLennan finished agonizingly close with 55.460 points.

Speaking to reporters earlier this week, MacLennan said she was focused on nailing her routine — not winning another medal.

"I mean, those are results in the past, and I'm really proud of what I was able to accomplish," she said. "I'm really grateful for the opportunity to represent Canada at my fourth Olympic Games. I want to just focus on the tangible things that can make my routine better."

Even before Tokyo, MacLennan was the only member of an exclusive club.

Thousands of Canadian athletes have competed at the Summer Olympics since Canada first began sending teams in 1904. But only one athlete — MacLennan — has been able to win a gold medal in two consecutive Games in the same individual event. (Rowers Marnie McBean and Kathleen Heddle won back-to-back gold medals in 1992 Barcelona and 1996 Atlanta, but in different events.)

Adblock test (Why?)


Canadian Rosie MacLennan's Olympic reign ends with 4th-place finish in trampoline - CBC.ca
Read More

Thursday, July 29, 2021

Affinity Place Has Ice Installed as Skating Season Nears - Discoverestevan.com - DiscoverEstevan.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Affinity Place Has Ice Installed as Skating Season Nears - Discoverestevan.com  DiscoverEstevan.com
Affinity Place Has Ice Installed as Skating Season Nears - Discoverestevan.com - DiscoverEstevan.com
Read More

Provincial government set to make announcement about Toronto’s Ontario Place - Global News

The provincial government is set to make an announcement about Ontario Place amid reports multiple companies have been chosen to redevelop the site.

According to a statement issued Thursday afternoon, Premier Doug Ford, Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Culture Industries Minister Lisa MacLeod and Toronto Mayor John Tory will be unveiling details at 10 a.m. on Friday. Senior bureaucrats were also scheduled to provide a briefing to reporters just ahead of the formal announcement.

Global News attempted to get more information about Friday’s announcement, but no further information was released Thursday evening.

However, a recent report by The Globe and Mail said three corporations, including a recreation firm from Quebec, won a bid process for control of the 155-acre site. Global News wasn’t able to independently confirm the details contained in the report.

Read more: Ford government looking for global partners to redevelop Ontario Place, casino off the table

Located south of Lake Shore Boulevard West and Exhibition Place, the iconic attraction site opened in 1971 but was shuttered in 2012 due to falling revenues at the amid tight provincial finances. At that time, the government said attendance fell to about 300,000 from a peak of around 2.5 million.

The Cinesphere was renovated in recent years and continues to operate year-round, showcasing films. Also, a 240-slip marina is open for use between May and October. More recently, the site has hosted festivals and drive-in events.

The Budweiser Stage, a 16,000-guest venue used for concerts, was also not subject to redevelopment and continues to be operated by Live Nation. Government officials previously said they intended to maintain three hectares of park land.

Trillium Park was opened at Ontario Place in 2017, five years after it had closed, and was connected to the city by the William G. Davis recreational trail, named after Ontario’s premier the year Ontario Place first opened.

Various proposals have been floated since its closure, including a year-round waterpark with a retractable roof, a casino complex and hotel, as well as residential development.

The areas that the government is proposing to redevelop include the mainland, the islands, the pods and the Cinesphere.

Read more: Indigenous learning centre opens for summer at Ontario Place

Previous government parameters ruled out proposals for any residential uses, proposals that require operating grants or capital investments for planning, design or construction from the province, or any land sale. Amid lingering questions about what would be allowed, the Ford government also eliminated the option for a casino.

Former Toronto Police chief Mark Saunders was hired by the Ford government as a special adviser to provide “technical expertise and strategic advice,” but details surrounding the exact nature of his work weren’t shared.

A news release issued on behalf of MacLeod in March said Saunders would be “working closely with the City of Toronto and Indigenous communities as well as stakeholders and businesses involved in the redevelopment project.”

“Mr. Saunders’ intimate knowledge of the diverse communities in Toronto and across Ontario will bring important perspectives to the project, as well as a level of expertise that will help turn our vision for the site into a reality,” MacLeod said in the statement.

Read more: Former Toronto police chief Mark Saunders to be paid up to $171K per year as Ontario Place advisor

The release said Saunders “will be able to leverage his senior-level experience in a major organization, experience in large-scale transformation change management and in the execution of complex project management initiatives to effectively advise the premier and minister.”

According to information posted on the Ontario government’s website, Saunders was set to be paid $700 a day for a maximum of up to $171,500 a year in the part-time role. An order-in-council said Saunders was appointed on Feb. 25 and will serve until Feb. 24, 2024 at the latest.

Those with the grassroots organization Ontario Place for All called on the government to keep the site publicly accessible and to host public consultations before changes are made.

They also wanted the area’s Indigenous heritage acknowledged and the site to be integrated into Exhibition Place, as well as existing recreational infrastructure.

— with files from The Canadian Press

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Adblock test (Why?)


Provincial government set to make announcement about Toronto’s Ontario Place - Global News
Read More

COVID-19: Masks should remain in place heading into the fall, says Ottawa’s top doctor - Global News

Ottawa’s medical officer of health says mask mandates should remain in place through fall as COVID-19 vaccination rates continue to grow ahead of September’s anticipated return to school.

Dr. Vera Etches told reporters Thursday that masks are proving to be a “very useful tool” to prevent transmission in other countries such as the United Kingdom and Israel, where COVID-19 has resurged amid economic reopenings.

Ottawa does not have to face a fourth wave of the virus locally, she said, if appropriate public health measures remain in place as vaccination rates near the 90-per cent threshold she has set for “community immunity.”

Read more: Ottawa 2nd-dose vaccine coverage ticks up as 1st doses stall

So far in Ottawa, 83 per cent of eligible residents aged 12 and older have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, with 70 per cent having gotten both shots.

But those rates still leave roughly 30 per cent of Ottawa’s total population without vaccine protection heading into the fall, including residents younger than 12 who are not yet eligible for a shot.

“That’s a large enough population to still have exponential growth,” Etches said.

“Vaccination alone won’t be enough to ward off a resurgence in the number of people testing positive. That’s why I think continuing to wear a mask will be key.”

Click to play video: 'CDC reinstates face mask recommendations amid U.S. surge in Delta variant cases' CDC reinstates face mask recommendations amid U.S. surge in Delta variant cases
CDC reinstates face mask recommendations amid U.S. surge in Delta variant cases

Ottawa’s mask bylaw is expected to expire on Aug. 26, but a provincial mandate for masking indoors remains in place.

Read more: Israel OKs COVID-19 booster shot for seniors as Delta variant spreads

Etches said she has spoken with Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, Dr. Kieran Moore, to advocate for the provincial masking rules to continue past the current Step 3 of reopening.

While she also said Thursday that distancing is also effective in settings where vaccination statuses aren’t known, she stopped short of saying whether she would recommend physical distancing measures stay in place for the months to come.

She said she will “monitor” viral levels post-Step 3 before she recommends distancing or other measures for the fall.

Click to play video: 'Ontario Premier Ford says most protocols likely ‘gone’ once province moves past Step 3' Ontario Premier Ford says most protocols likely ‘gone’ once province moves past Step 3
Ontario Premier Ford says most protocols likely ‘gone’ once province moves past Step 3

Even though vaccination rates have slowed in Ottawa as of late, Etches said she’s “very pleased” with the turnout for first and second shots.

Ottawa Public Health’s polling on vaccinations before the rollout began indicated that 82 per cent said they would get a vaccine right away, while 10 per cent said they weren’t sure and less than 10 per cent of respondents said they didn’t want one.

“Now we’re working through a group that wasn’t sure, so it does take more time to have those conversations with people,” Etches said of the slowing vaccination pace locally.

OPH is working on reducing barriers to accessing vaccines, with Etches citing childcare and transportation to clinics as continued obstacles for some residents getting vaccinated.

Read more: As Canada hits COVID-19 vaccine milestone, reducing barriers to access key, experts say

The city launched a new initiative last week to allow workplaces, faith congregations and other community groups to request a mobile vaccination team to come to their neighbourhood or office.

Etches said that the city has so far received more than 50 requests for mobile clinics.

She also said she expects a vaccination “push” at the end of August as families prepare for a return to school. One upside of being fully vaccinated is that children won’t have to go home and isolate if they’re exposed to a positive case at school, Etches said.

Meanwhile, OPH reported eight new cases of COVID-19 in the city on Thursday, raising the number of active cases locally to 51.

No new deaths related to the virus were added in the latest report.

OPH also says a second person is now in hospital with COVID-19 in Ottawa, though neither patients are currently in the intensive care unit.

Click to play video: 'No more masks on transit, isolation of positive COVID-19 cases come Aug. 16 in Alberta' No more masks on transit, isolation of positive COVID-19 cases come Aug. 16 in Alberta
No more masks on transit, isolation of positive COVID-19 cases come Aug. 16 in Alberta

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Adblock test (Why?)


COVID-19: Masks should remain in place heading into the fall, says Ottawa’s top doctor - Global News
Read More

Our Place Society dishes up holiday cheer at annual Christmas lunch in Victoria – Vancouver Island Free Daily - vancouverislandfreedaily.com

Our Place Society kicked off the holidays in gourmet style this year, treating clients to turkey, potatoes, stuffing and vegetables on Wedn...