Home Blog Page 518

Next phase of Ontario’s COVID-19 vaccination plan aims to offer 340,000 doses per day

Retired general Rick Hillier, chair of the province's COVID-19 vaccine distribution task force, laid out the plan during a media conference at Queen's Park on February 24, 2021. (CPAC screenshot)

In the next phase of its COVID-19 vaccination plan, Ontario plans to offer a minimum of 340,000 vaccine doses per day.

Retired general Rick Hillier, chair of the province’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution task force, laid out the plan during a media conference at Queen’s Park on Wednesday (February 24).

So far, Ontario has administered just over 600,000 vaccine doses, with more than 250,000 people fully vaccinated — representing around 1.7 per cent of Ontario’s population. Most of these vaccinations have been administered to residents and staff of long-term care homes.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“This is a ponderous time for us,” Hillier said, explaining the slow rate of vaccinations. “We’re actually taking the vaccine to people, as opposed to having people come to mass vaccination centres for the most part. And of course that’s more time consuming, more difficult to do, and slightly slower than what we’d want.”

“But we’re averaging 16 to 18,000 doses per day — a little bit more on some days — and we will pick up that pace in the next several days going forward,” he added. “And then as we open up the mass vaccination sites after that, the pace will pick up quite dramatically.”

Hillier said the current focus is on completing vaccinations of residents of long-term care homes and high-risk retirement homes, with around 90 per cent of these residents having already received their first dose of the vaccine, as well as administering second doses to these residents and health care workers. Another focus is on vaccinations in remote communities, mainly in northern Ontario, including First Nations.

With more vaccine doses arriving in the first week of March, the province will focus on completing vaccinations of the residents of all 626 long-term care homes and all 775 retirement homes in Ontario — more than 100,000 people.

The next priority will be patient-facing health care professionals who stand the greatest risk of contracting the virus, as well as remote communities and First Nations, including First Nations Elder care homes and Elders in the community.

Hillier pointed out that, beginning March 1st, 10 per cent of vaccine doses will be set aside so the province can respond to vaccine disruptions or critical outbreaks.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Public health units are coordinating vaccine distribution, Hillier said, because they have the expertise and knowledge of the local community. While hospitals will be involved in vaccination efforts, the province will not rely on them as they need to be prepared to focus on caring for COVID-19 patients during outbreaks.

Along with health units, hospitals, and primary care professionals, Hillier said pharmacies will play a key role, administering between 10 and 20 per cent of vaccinations.

On Monday, March 15th, Ontario will launch its vaccination appointment online reservation system and call centre.

“We are now furiously working to do the final stages of preparation, to test it thoroughly, and then to go live with on the 15th of March,” Hillier said.

With confidence in vaccine supply through to June, Hillier said he expects Ontario communities will able to administer at least 340,000 vaccine doses per day.

“It’s all hands on deck,” he said. “We have asked each public health unit, with all of those resources, to make sure they can rise to a minimum of 10,000 vaccinations per day.”

He added that smaller health unit regions won’t need to reach that level, but larger health unit regions like Toronto will want to do more.

The next phase of vaccine distributions will be based on age, Hillier said.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“We will start with the 80 year olds and over in the third week of March,” he said, which amounts to just over 600,000 people, around 50,000 of whom have already been vaccinated in long-term care facilities.

When the online reservation system and call centre is launched on March 15th, people in the 80-plus age bracket can find out when and where they can get their vaccinations. For those without internet or phone access or who need assistance, Hillier encourages family members, friends, or volunteers to assist them. Hillier said public health units will also be reaching out to those 80 years and over in their communities, flyers will be mailed to households, and there will be public service announcements.

Vaccinations of other age brackets will begin in April, Hillier said.

“Starting the 15th of April, it will be 75 year olds and plus,” he said. “Starting the 1st of May, it will be 70 year olds and plus. Starting the 1st of June, it will be 65 year olds and plus.”

Vaccinations of other age brackets in descending order will follow, although Hillier provided no specific dates for other age brackets.

As for the March 15th launch of the online booking and call centre system, Hillier urged people outside of the 80-plus age bracket not to use the system unless they are helping someone in that age bracket to get an appointment.

“Unless you’re 80 years old, or unless you’re acting to get a reservation for somebody who’s 80 years old or more, please to not go online,” Hillier said. “You will not be permitted to go through the system if you’re not in that age bracket or not acting for somebody in that age bracket. And please do not call the call centre.”

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

When making a vaccine appointment through the system, people will be asked to enter their postal code and will be shown the closest location where they can make their appointment.

Hillier said these locations could include mass vaccination clinics, a pharmacy, or potentially a “mini-mass vaccination clinics”, where primary care professionals would come together to create a smaller clinic for their patients and others.

“When you make the first appointment, you will make a second appointment to get the second needle in your arm and to get the immunization program complete,” Hillier said.

Hillier added the vaccination roll-out plan depends on the vaccine supply.

“Everything I said about the age brackets and the date times is vaccine dependent,” he said. “If we have another interruption in vaccines, obviously that would slow that process. If we get more vaccines brought to Canada and then to Ontario, that would speed up the process.”

For the second phase of the vaccination roll-out plan, Hillier said the province is in the process of deciding how to proceed with vaccinations of essential workers in workplaces outside of the health care system.

Peterborough woman bequeaths $741,000 to local humane society for new animal care centre

Cynthia (Cyndy) Richards, who passed away in 2019, has bequeathed $741,000 to the Peterborough Humane Society. Richards was an avid volunteer at the Peterborough Humane Society who owned a number of rescued cats. (Supplied photo)

A Peterborough woman has bequeathed $741,000 to the Peterborough Humane Society, the organization announced on Wednesday (February 24). The gift will be used to fund the building of the society’s new animal care centre.

Cynthia (Cyndy) Richards passed away in November 2019 at the age of 71 after a long illness.

Richards grew up in Peterborough, leaving to work briefly in Toronto before moving to Edmonton, Alberta, where she worked as an x-ray technician for most of her career. Living mostly in the country, Richards owned horses and cats. All of her cats were rescues.

She returned to Peterborough in 2000, bringing her two horses and cats with her. She continued working as an x-ray technician at Peterborough Regional Health Centre until she retired.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“Her whole life she had a deep love for animals,” says Pat de Villiers, a long-time friend and Richards’ power of attorney.

Richards was also an avid volunteer at the Peterborough Humane Society.

“She would come into the shelter, take her coat off, say hi to everyone before starting her day and then she would spend all her time with the cats,” recalls Susan Lashmar, an animal care worker at the Peterborough Humane Society. “She’d snuggle them, help groom them, and loved every minute of it. She would come in as often as she could.”

A rendering of the Peterborough Humane Society's new animal care centre.  In recognition of Cynthia Richards' $741,000 gift, the cat adoption program at the Peterborough Humane Society's new animal centre will be named the Cynthia Richards Cat Adoption Program. (Supplied graphic)
A rendering of the Peterborough Humane Society’s new animal care centre. In recognition of Cynthia Richards’ $741,000 gift, the cat adoption program at the Peterborough Humane Society’s new animal centre will be named the Cynthia Richards Cat Adoption Program. (Supplied graphic)

In recognition of Richards’ gift, the cat adoption program at the Peterborough Humane Society’s new animal centre will be named the Cynthia Richards Cat Adoption Program, and her memory will be honoured with signage in the cat adoption areas and on the centre’s donor wall in the adoption and education centre’s lobby.

As well as cat adoption services, the new animal care centre will offer a publicly accessible spay/neuter clinic, providing up to 5,000 pet surgeries each year. The new centre will be home to Canada’s first provincial dog rehabilitation centre. Funded and managed by the Ontario SPCA, the dog rehabilitation centre will provide behavioural therapy for neglected and abused dogs to help them prepare for their forever homes.

While Richards’ gift brings the Peterborough Humane Society significantly closer to realizing its fundraising goal to build the new animal care centre, the society is still encouraging community support. Those interested in making a donation or leaving a gift in their will can email campaign manager Alex Tindale at a.tindale@ptbohs.com.

Ontario reports 975 new COVID-19 cases, including 7 in greater Kawarthas region

Here’s an update on COVID-19 cases in Ontario as well as in the greater Kawarthas region.

For the first time since February 17, Ontario is reporting fewer than 1,000 daily new cases. The 975 new cases include no new cases of any of the COVID-19 variants of concern, although Peterborough has today reported its first confirmed case of the B.1.1.7 UK variant. The seven-day average of daily cases in Ontario has increased by 10 to 1,055.

In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 7 new cases to report with an additional 20 cases resolved. The number of active cases across the region has decreased by 15 to 81. There are 2 new COVID-related deaths in Kawartha Lakes.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Most of today’s new cases are in Toronto (343) and Peel (186).

There are double-digit increases in York (89), Simcoe Muskoka (48), Waterloo (40), Thunder Bay (37), Durham (35), Hamilton (35), Windsor-Essex (32), Halton (27), Niagara (21), Ottawa (18), Middlesex-London (17), and Lambton (11), with smaller increases in Brant (8), Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph (8), and Southwestern (6).

The remaining 17 health units are reporting 5 or fewer new cases, with 9 health units reporting no new cases at all.

Of today’s new cases, 54% are among people 39 and younger, with the highest number of cases (365) among people ages 20-39, followed by 278 cases among people ages 40-59.

With 1,002 more cases resolved since yesterday, the percentage of resolved cases remains unchanged at 94.2%. The average positivity rate across Ontario has increased by 0.9% from yesterday to 4.2%, meaning that 42 out of every 1,000 tests performed were positive for COVID-19 on February 22.

Ontario is reporting 12 new COVID-19 deaths today, including 1 in long-term care homes. Ontario has averaged 24 new daily deaths over the past week.

Hospitalizations have increased by 72 from yesterday to 718, with the number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs increasing by 3 to 283, and the number of patients with COVID-19 on ventilators decreasing by 3 to 186.

A total of 25,979 tests were completed yesterday, with the backlog of tests under investigation increasing by 16,919 to 28,802.

A total of 585,707 doses of vaccine have now been administered, an increase of 16,252 from yesterday, with 247,042 people fully vaccinated with both doses of vaccine, an increase of 6,373 from yesterday, representing 1.68% of Ontario’s population.

There are 175 new cases in Ontario schools, an increase of 120 from yesterday, including 149 student cases and 22 staff cases. There are 43 new cases in licensed child care settings in Ontario, an increase of 28 from yesterday, with 29 cases among children and 14 cases among staff. These numbers include cases reported on Friday and Monday.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 7 new cases to report, including 3 in Peterborough, 3 in Hastings Prince Edward, 1 in Northumberland. There are no new cases to report in Kawartha Lakes or Haliburton.

In Peterborough, the number of active cases related to the outbreak at Buckhorn Day Care and Nursery School has increased to 15. Peterborough has also reported its first confirmed case of the B.1.1.7 UK variant.

There are 2 new COVID-related deaths to report in Kawartha Lakes.

An additional 20 cases have been resolved, including 9 in Peterborough, 6 in Northumberland, 3 in Kawartha Lakes, and 2 in Hastings Prince Edward.

There are currently 81 active cases in the greater Kawarthas region, a decrease of 15 from yesterday, including 35 in Peterborough, 17 in Northumberland, 15 in Kawartha Lakes, 13 in Hastings Prince Edward (2 in Quinte West, 8 in Belleville, 1 in Tyendinaga & Deseronto, 1 in Prince Edward County, 1 in Central Hastings), and 1 in Haliburton.

Since the pandemic began in the greater Kawarthas region, there have been 614 confirmed positive cases in the Peterborough area (570 resolved with 9 deaths), 528 in the City of Kawartha Lakes (471 resolved with 55 deaths), 431 in Northumberland County (403 resolved with 11 deaths), 51 in Haliburton County (50 resolved with no deaths), and 398 in Hastings and Prince Edward counties (379 resolved with 6 deaths). The most recent 2 deaths were reported in Kawartha Lakes on February 23.

The provincial data in this report is pulled from Ontario’s integrated Public Health Information System (iPHIS) at 12 p.m. the previous day. Data from local health units is more current and is usually reflected in the provincial data the following day. There may be discrepancies between the Ontario data reported today (which is from yesterday) and the local health unit data reported today (which is from today).

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Peterborough Public Health

Peterborough Public Health’s service area is the City and County of Peterborough and the Hiawatha and Curve Lake First Nations.

The health unit provides daily reports, including on weekends, excluding statutory holidays.

Confirmed positive: 614 (increase of 3)
Active cases: 35 (decrease of 6)
Close contacts: 237 (decrease of 5)
Deaths: 9 (no change)
Resolved: 570 (increase of 9)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 24 (no change)*
Total tests completed: Over 43,100 (no change)
Outbreaks: Buckhorn Day Care and Nursery School (no change)**
Vaccine doses administered: 976 (as of February 19)

*As of February 23, Peterborough Regional Health Centre is reporting fewer than 5 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 (no change) and 17 patients transferred from other areas as a result of a provincial directive (no change).

**As of February 23, there are 15 active cases related to the outbreak at Buckhorn Day Care and Nursery School.

 

Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit

The Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit’s service area is the City of Kawartha Lakes, Northumberland County, and Haliburton County.

The health unit provides reports from Monday to Saturday, excluding Sundays and statutory holidays.

Confirmed positive: 1,010, including 528 in Kawartha Lakes, 431 in Northumberland, and 51 in Haliburton (increase of 1 in Northumberland)*
Active cases: 33, including 15 in Kawartha Lakes, 17 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (decrease of 10, including 5 in Kawartha Lakes and 5 in Northumberland)
Probable cases: 1 in Kawartha Lakes (no change)
High-risk contacts: 153, including 77 in Kawartha Lakes, 67 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (net decrease of 1)**
Hospitalizations (total to date): 44, including 27 in Kawartha Lakes, 15 in Northumberland, and 2 in Haliburton (no change)***
Deaths (including among probable cases): 66, including 55 in Kawartha Lakes and 11 in Northumberland (increase of 2 in Kawartha Lakes)
Resolved: 924, including 471 in Kawartha Lakes, 403 in Northumberland, 50 in Haliburton (increase of 9, including 3 in Kawartha Lakes and 6 in Northumberland)
Tests completed: 139,406 (increase of 543)
Institutional outbreaks: Caressant Care McLaughlin Road long-term care home in Lindsay, Regency long-term care home in Port Hope, Warkworth Place in Warkworth (no change)

*The health unit states that total counts and counts for individual counties may fluctuate from previously reported counts as cases are transferred to or from the health unit based on case investigation details and routine data cleaning.

**This total includes an additional 8 high-risk contacts directly followed up through the Public Health Ontario contact tracing process that are missing the contacts’ county.

***As of February 23, Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay reports no patients are hospitalized with COVID-19 (no change).

 

Hastings Prince Edward Public Health

Hastings Prince Edward Public Health’s service area is Hastings County (including Bancroft) and Prince Edward County.

The health unit provides daily reports, including on weekends, excluding statutory holidays.

Confirmed positive: 398 (increase of 3)
Active cases: 13 (increase of 1)
Deaths: 6 (no change)
Currently hospitalized: 0 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU: 0 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU on ventilator (total to date): 0 (no change)
Resolved: 379 (increase of 2)
Tests completed: 60,842 (increase of 33)
Vaccines administered: 1,946 (increase of 96)
Institutional outbreaks: None (no change)

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Province of Ontario

Confirmed positive: 295,119 (increase of 975)
7-day average of daily new cases: 1,055 (increase of 10)
Resolved: 277,939 (increase of 1,002, 94.2% of all cases)
Positivity rate: 4.2% (increase of 0.9%)
Hospitalizations: 718 (increase of 72)
Hospitalizations in ICU: 283 (increase of 3)
Hospitalizations in ICU on ventilator: 186 (decrease of 3)
Deaths: 6,884 (increase of 12)
7-day average of daily new deaths: 24 (no change)
Deaths of residents in long-term care homes: 3,858 (increase of 1)
Total tests completed: 10,751,300 (increase of 25,979)
Tests under investigation: 28,802 (increase of 16,919)
Vaccination doses administered: 585,707 (increase of 16,252)
People fully vaccinated (two doses): 247,042 (increase of 6,373), 1.68% of Ontario’s population
Total COVID-19 variant cases: 390 of B.1.1.7 UK variant (no change); 9 of B.1.351 South Africa variant (no change); 1 of P.1 Brazilian variant (no change)

COVID-19 cases in Ontario from January 23 - February 22, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 cases in Ontario from January 23 – February 22, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from January 23 - February 22, 2021. The red line is the number of tests completed daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from January 23 – February 22, 2021. The red line is the number of tests completed daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from January 23 - February 22, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of hospitalizations, the purple line is the daily number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs, and the dotted orange line is a five-day moving average of is a five-day moving average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from January 23 – February 22, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of hospitalizations, the purple line is the daily number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs, and the dotted orange line is a five-day moving average of is a five-day moving average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from January 23 - February 22, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from January 23 – February 22, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from January 23 - February 22, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from January 23 – February 22, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)

 

For more information about COVID-19 in Ontario, visit covid-19.ontario.ca.

Police seek suspect in Monday morning robbery in Lindsay

Police are seeking this man who robbed a William Street North business in Lindsay on February 22, 2021. (Police-supplied photo)

Kawartha Lakes police are seeking a suspect in the robbery of a business on William Street North in Lindsay on Monday (February 22).

Police report a lone suspect entered the store at 6:23 a.m., approached the counter, and passed a note to the employee demanding money.

The suspect then went behind the counter and removed a quantity of cash before leaving the store.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

The suspect is described as a white male between 25 and 30 years of age with a tall and thin build, wearing a dark grey hooded jacket, black scarf face covering, black pants, and black-and-white striped shoes.

Anyone with information about this incident is asked to call the Kawartha Lakes Police Service at 705-324-5252.

If you prefer to remain anonymous, you can contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or online at www.khcrimestoppers.com.

PRHC receives first shipment of 5,850 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine

The first shipment of 5,850 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine arrive at Peterborough Regional Health Centre on February 23, 2021. (Supplied photo)

Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC) has received its first shipment of 5,850 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, the hospital announced on Tuesday (February 23).

First doses of the vaccine will be administered through the hospital’s COVID-19 vaccine clinic to long-term care home employees and essential caregivers, community paramedics, and health care workers at the hospital deemed to be at highest risk. The Ontario government has designated these groups as the immediate priority to receive vaccinations.

The hospital expects to have the capacity to offer up to 2,500 vaccination appointments for these immediate-priority groups between Wednesday, February 24th and Sunday, February 28th.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“We will work closely with Peterborough Public Health over the coming weeks to ensure that immediate and high-priority populations have access to the vaccine as quickly as possible,” says Dr. Lynn Mikula, PRHC’s chief of staff and chief medical officer.

Those who are eligible to receive the vaccine will be contacted directly through their employer to sign up for an appointment at the clinic.

“This will help us start to build a ring of protection around our most vulnerable residents — a critical goal as variants of concern arrive in our community.” adds Dr. Rosana Salvaterra, Peterborough’s medical officer of health.

On Tuesday, Peterborough Public Health confirmed the first case of a variant of concern in Peterborough, a man in his 20s who was infected with the B.1.1.7 UK variant.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

The hospital’s COVID-19 vaccine clinic will be staffed by registered nurses and registered practical nurses, as well as physicians from PRHC and the Peterborough community.

Once it is up and running at full capacity, the clinic will be able to offer up to 700 daily vaccination appointments daily, seven days a week, depending on the demand and supply of vaccine.

According to the province’s vaccine distribution plan, the next priority population for vaccinations will be people receiving home and community care, as well as other residents aged 80 years or older living in the community. These vaccinations are expected to begin in mid-March.

First COVID-19 variant of concern confirmed in Peterborough

The first case of the more contagious UK variant of COVID-19 in Peterborough has been confirmed.

On Tuesday (February 23), Peterborough Public Health confirmed a local resident has tested positive for B.1.1.7, commonly called the UK variant as it was first detected in the United Kingdom.

“With this confirmation of a variant of concern, following public health measures has never been more important as variants of concern have a higher rate of transmissibility than the dominant COVID-19 strain,” says medical officer of health Dr. Rosana Salvaterra in a media release.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“Now it’s a race against time to try and immunize our most vulnerable populations while containing the spread of further cases,” she adds. “This is where we need everyone’s help.”

The health unit says the variant case is a man in his 20s who works from home and is self-isolating, adding that contact tracing is underway.

According to the health unit, the man appears to have been infected by a roommate who was identified as a high-risk contact of another case from another region. This roommate has since left the Peterborough area.

There is one other high-risk contact connected to the man’s household who has tested negative, the health unit says, but will be retested in 10 days.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

There are currently 390 confirmed cases of the B.1.1.7 variant in Ontario. The first confirmed case of the variant in the greater Kawarthas region was reported in Port Hope on Tuesday, February 9.

Dr. Salvaterra is urging local residents to avoid all non-essential travel, don’t invite visitors into your home, stay two metres distant from others, wear a mask, wash your hands frequently, and get tested if you have even one symptom.

“The good news is that the vaccines in use are effective against the known variant strains,” she says. “But we are still a long way away from having all our vulnerable populations protected.”

“We are working very hard to ramp up our local immunization roll out as supplies allow, so we are counting on the community’s support so we can avoid the exponential spread of the virus as seen in other areas of the world.”

The Venue in downtown Peterborough is for sale

The Venue in downtown Peterborough is listed for sale for $2,450,000. (Photo: REALTOR.ca)

The Venue in downtown Peterborough is for sale.

The multifunctional event space, located at 286 George Street North, was listed in mid-January with R.J.L. Realty Ltd. Brokerage for $2,450,000.

Previously The Vibe nightclub, The Venue was purchased in 2006 by local entrepreneur Michael Skinner and opened in 2010 after a $1-million renovation. It is currently operated by Catia Skinner, CEO of Kawartha Entertainment Group Inc.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

The 14,000-square-foot building — which features a lobby wine bar, main hall, and balcony lounge — has a capacity for 900 guests for a cocktail party or for 400 seated guests. Since opening, The Venue has hosted concerts, conferences, trade shows, weddings, and special events.

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on event and performance venues, with lockdowns and public health measures either preventing organized events or requiring capacity restrictions making many events financially infeasible.

Co-owner Michael Skinner tells kawarthaNOW that, while the decision to list The Venue for sale “is not directly COVID related,” the pandemic’s adverse effects on business is a factor.

“Most of the events we run there are networking social events,” he says, noting he was forced to lay off 53 employees when the pandemic hit last March, keeping three on who were then laid off in November.

“In the world of social distancing, it’s extremely hard to run an event,” he adds. “On and off, we have been allowed to let up to 50 people, including staff, come in.”

The Venue in downtown Peterborough is a multipurpose event space that hosts a wide range of events including conferences and conventions, weddings, business meetings, galas and other fundraisers, concerts, art shows, and sports events. (Photo: Kawartha Entertainment Group Inc.)
The Venue in downtown Peterborough is a multipurpose event space that hosts a wide range of events including conferences and conventions, weddings, business meetings, galas and other fundraisers, concerts, art shows, and sports events. (Photo: Kawartha Entertainment Group Inc.)

Skinner is adamant he won’t be devastated if the building doesn’t sell.

“We’re exploring to see who’s out there, and sometimes the only way to find out is to put it up for sale,” he says. “We’ve had six or seven showings, [including] a couple of people that are local. So far all the people the agent has talked to very much want to see it continue to be exactly what it is.”

That’s good news, particularly for Peterborough’s music community that has seen a number of downtown venues close in the last couple of years. Still, Skinner acknowledges “it’s possible” a buyer would want to repurpose the building.

“But it’s a special-purpose building that’s very much built for entertainment,” he notes.

“We’re selling it with all the chattels, all the equipment, the sound system, and the whole works. We also have quite a number of events that are booked, a lot of annual events that we run. When we finally have a vaccine and things open back up again, all of those events are going to still happen. It’s not impossible [that it would be repurposed], but I’m not sure how feasible that would be.”

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“We can be a bit picky and choosy on who buys it,” Skinner says. “I want it to benefit our downtown where I think it has become a bit of a pillar. I want to see that continue. I put a lot of my soul into building it. We didn’t necessarily do it from a financial point of view. Catia and I typically donate back whatever profit it makes at the end of the year.”

Skinner makes it clear The Venue has, and will continue, to make money.

“It hasn’t made a lot of money every year because we’ve donated a lot back but I don’t want to give the impression it doesn’t make money, because it does. Somebody else coming in doesn’t have to do that [donate back to the community], although we’d encourage it.”

The Venue features a full kitchen, capacity of more than 900 or 400 for a sit-down dinner, and concert-quality sound equipment. (Photo: Kawartha Entertainment Group Inc.)
The Venue features a full kitchen, capacity of more than 900 or 400 for a sit-down dinner, and concert-quality sound equipment. (Photo: Kawartha Entertainment Group Inc.)

Skinner says he was driven by a “personal passion” to establish The Venue, and hopes that any new owner would see the value it serves to the community as an multifunctional event space.

“We needed something in the community that brought everyone together. We want someone that wants to build community and keeps the same vision of it being multi-purpose and has the vision to keep it going.”

To that end, Skinner says he’s willing to work with a potential buyer to make the sale happen.

“We’re willing to do a pretty significant VTB [vendor take back]. Catia and I are willing to hold the financing. We know that financing special-use buildings is tricky. We’re willing to be the financer or even potentially a minority partner. We’re pretty flexible as long as the buyer is willing to support both the business and the arts community.”

Police continue to seek second vehicle in January pedestrian death in Peterborough

Police are seeking the owner or operator of this charcoal-grey four-door Toyota Matrix hatchback with black rims in the death of 40-year-old Corey Johnston on January 14, 2021 in Peterborough. (Police-supplied photo)

Peterborough police are continuing their search for a second vehicle that was in the area when a pedestrian was struck and killed in downtown Peterborough in January.

Corey Johnston, 40, of Peterborough was killed in the incident, which took place on George Street North near the Holiday Inn at around 8:30 p.m. on January 14, 2021.

As part of the investigation, police are seeking to identify the owner or operator a second vehicle that was in the area at the time of the incident.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

The charcoal-grey four-door hatchback with black rims — which police have since determined is a Toyota Matrix — was seen travelling northbound on George Street, then continuing northbound on Water Street before turning westbound onto King Street, then southbound on George Street before turning westbound onto Sherbrooke Street.

Police are asking the owner or operator of the vehicle to contact them.

Anyone from the public who is able to identify the owner or operator of the vehicle is asked to contact Constable Pilling at 705-876-1122 ext 254, or to submit an anonymous tip through Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or online at stopcrimehere.ca.

Police are seeking the owner or operator of this charcoal-grey four-door Toyota Matrix hatchback with black rims in the death of 40-year-old Corey Johnston on January 14, 2021 in Peterborough. (Police-supplied photo)
Police are seeking the owner or operator of this charcoal-grey four-door Toyota Matrix hatchback with black rims in the death of 40-year-old Corey Johnston on January 14, 2021 in Peterborough. (Police-supplied photo)

Local artist and advocate Elisha Rubacha participates in national panel discussing basic income for artists

Writer and publisher Elisha Rubacha participated in a recent national discussion on basic income for artists, hosted by the Media Arts Network of Ontario. At the 2017 Precarious Festival in Peterborough, Rubacha demonstrated physically making a book before a live audience, making visible the invisible labour that goes into arts sector publishing. The festival explored the consequences of economic insecurity of working artists, a situation that has only become worse during the pandemic. (Photo: Andy Carroll)

The pandemic has laid bare the ever-widening wealth and income inequality that exists in Canada.

Though flawed, emergency response benefits such as CERB and CRB — the closest thing the country has ever seen to a basic income — have provided an income floor, preventing or alleviating poverty for many Canadians (for those able to access the programs, that is), while also stimulating and stabilizing the broader economy.

In terms of pandemic recovery, basic income has increasingly been a subject of discussion across the political spectrum. As such, support for basic income is growing among parliamentarians and the wider Canadian public.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Much advocacy work continues to be done, and Canadian artists and arts workers — many of whom face unreliable incomes and precarious labour conditions — are proving to be leading voices in ongoing basic income conversations.

In July 2020, over 300 Canadian artists, arts workers, and organizations (including Peterborough-Nogojiwanong’s Electric City Culture Council) published an open letter, signed by organizations representing 75,000 artists, asking Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to create a permanent Basic Income Guarantee.

Recently, the Media Arts Network of Ontario hosted two full-day panels called “Basic Income: An Artists’ Commission”, which will inform a report authored by the commissioners for advocacy work ahead of a possible federal election this year.

Writer and publisher Elisha Rubacha and poet Justin Million were two of 20 Peterborough-area artists profiled in 2020's "Essential", a photography project by Julie Gagne sponsored by the Electric City Culture Council to raise awareness of the precarious situation of local artists and arts organizations during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo: Julie Gagne)
Writer and publisher Elisha Rubacha and poet Justin Million were two of 20 Peterborough-area artists profiled in 2020’s “Essential”, a photography project by Julie Gagne sponsored by the Electric City Culture Council to raise awareness of the precarious situation of local artists and arts organizations during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo: Julie Gagne)

More than 20 artists from across the country, working within all disciplines, delivered testimonies regarding the impact a steady, fixed income (or lack thereof) has had on their lives and artistic practices during the pandemic.

One of the testifiers, writer and publisher Elisha Rubacha from Peterborough-Nogojiwanong, also happens to be an expert on basic income.

In addition to being a practising artist, Rubacha, who works as a knowledge transfer specialist and civic engagement coordinator for local not-for-profit Nourish Peterborough, advocates for a national Basic Income Guarantee program.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Rubacha has also participated, as both an artist and a panellist, in Precarious: Peterborough ArtsWORK festival (2017) and Precarious2: Peterborough ArtsWORK Festival (2019). Co-presented by Public Energy and Fleshy Flud, both of the month-long multi-arts festivals investigated precarious labour through artistic works, workshops, and community-based panel discussions. The next Precarious festival is slated to occur later this year, with a mix of online and in-person events.

As discourse surrounding basic income becomes mainstream, Rubacha stresses the need for linguistic clarity to distinguish the many nuances to various approaches to basic income programs.

“People use UBI [Universal Basic Income], which is an American import, as an umbrella term, but that’s not what many Canadian advocates are looking for,” Rubacha says.

Instead of a UBI, which would be given to every citizen and then taxed back from those who don’t need it, most Canadian experts are calling for a Basic Income Guarantee (BIG) — a needs-based, means-tested income support program.

Elisha Rubacha, pictured at a book launch at The Theatre on King in December 2017, is the editor and designer of bird, buried press in Peterborough. (Photo: Andy Carroll)
Elisha Rubacha, pictured at a book launch at The Theatre on King in December 2017, is the editor and designer of bird, buried press in Peterborough. (Photo: Andy Carroll)

For advocates like Rubacha, a UBI model is not feasible for pandemic recovery for artists or others living on a low income, as it would be too slow and too expensive to implement.

“The problem with UBI is that it costs too much up-front,” explains Rubacha. “It’s going everywhere instead of where it’s most needed. Whereas a BIG is income-tested for people living in poverty and then it tapers off, much like the Canada Child Benefit.”

Since the tax system infrastructure already exists, tax-rate increases would not necessarily be required to fund a negative income tax-style Basic Income Guarantee program; in fact, a BIG could actually result in savings for the state.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“We’re currently spending billions of dollars on poverty every year, especially on health care and the criminal justice system,” says Rubacha. “All kinds of health problems are directly related to food insecurity, and so many people are criminalized because they’re living in poverty. Lifting people out of poverty frees up so much money that we’re currently wasting.”

“People want to work. In the Mincome [Manitoba] pilot project, the only demographics that saw a dip in workforce participation were mothers choosing to stay home with their kids and young people choosing to stay in school so they could get better jobs.”

“In the Ontario pilot project, we saw a lot of entrepreneurs,” Rubacha says, referring to the basic income pilot project announced by the previous Liberal government in 2017. The three-year pilot was cancelled prematurely by Doug Ford’s PC government in July 2018, a month after it was elected, citing the program’s high cost as one factor.

“The people who did leave their jobs actually went on to start new businesses and create even more jobs in their community,” she points out.

Hamilton photographer Jessie Golem's "Humans of Basic Income" photographic series showed the human side of the Ontario government's decision to cancel the Ontario Basic Income Pilot Program. Rather than a Universal Basic Income (UBI) model, which would be given to every citizen and then taxed back from those who don't need it, most Canadian experts are calling for a Basic Income Guarantee (BIG), a needs-based and means-tested income support program. (Photo: Jessie Golem)
Hamilton photographer Jessie Golem’s “Humans of Basic Income” photographic series showed the human side of the Ontario government’s decision to cancel the Ontario Basic Income Pilot Program. Rather than a Universal Basic Income (UBI) model, which would be given to every citizen and then taxed back from those who don’t need it, most Canadian experts are calling for a Basic Income Guarantee (BIG), a needs-based and means-tested income support program. (Photo: Jessie Golem)

For artists who face unreliable incomes, a BIG would provide an income floor to help cover the costs of living, freeing their time and energy to create artwork on their own terms. It would give them leverage when faced with unsafe or underpaid work.

A BIG could put an end to the romanticized trope of the “starving artist”, an exploitative framework that currently sees cultural production — a massive economic driver — subsidized by the unpaid work of artists.

The arts and culture sector accounted for $56.02 billion of Canada’s total GDP in 2018. That’s twice as much as the forestry sector at $21.8 billion and nearly 10 times as much as sports at $5.9 billion.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

“Artists have been living precariously for generations — we always have — and that’s not something I have a romantic, fuzzy feeling about at all,” says Kate Story, founder and artistic director of the Precarious festivals.

“I don’t create better when I’m miserable and I can’t eat or pay my rent,” continues Story. “Those periods in my life have not been conducive for creative output.”

As Rubacha so eloquently stated to close her testimony on the national stage, “If we continue to accept ourselves as starving artists, we will be doomed to try to create under those conditions.”

 

This story has been corrected to clarify the difference between Universal Basic Income and a Basic Income Guarantee.

Ontario reports 1,058 new COVID-19 cases, including 14 in greater Kawarthas region

Here’s an update on COVID-19 cases in Ontario as well as in the greater Kawarthas region.

Ontario is reporting 1,058 new cases today, with no new cases of any COVID-19 variants. The seven-day average of daily cases in Ontario has increased by 14 to 1,045.

In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 14 new cases to report, with an additional 18 cases resolved. The number of active cases across the region has decreased by 3 to 96.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Most of today’s new cases are in Toronto (325) and Peel (215). For the first time since November 17, the number of daily cases in York (87) has dropped below 100.

There are double-digit increases in Hamilton (56), Waterloo (48), Simcoe Muskoka (47), Durham (45), Thunder Bay (32), Halton (28), Northwestern (26), Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph (18), Niagara (14), Lambton (10), and Windsor-Essex (10), with smaller increases in Middlesex-London (9), Haldimand-Norfolk (8), Porcupine (7), Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge (6), and Brant (6).

The remaining 15 health units are reporting 5 or fewer new cases, with 8 health units reporting no new cases at all.

Of today’s new cases, 55% are among people 39 and younger, with the highest number of cases (417) among people ages 20-39, followed by 318 cases among people ages 40-59.

With 1,083 more cases resolved since yesterday, the percentage of resolved cases has increased by 0.1% at 94.2%. The average positivity rate across Ontario has increased by 0.6% from yesterday to 3.3%, meaning that 33 out of every 1,000 tests performed were positive for COVID-19 on February 21.

Ontario is reporting 11 new COVID-19 deaths today, including 4 in long-term care homes. Ontario has averaged 24 new daily deaths over the past week.

Hospitalizations have decreased by 14 from yesterday to 646, but more than 10% of hospitals did not submit data for this report, so the actual number of hospitalizations may be higher. The number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs has increased by 3 to 280, and the number of patients with COVID-19 on ventilators has increased by 8 to 189.

A total of 31,163 tests were completed yesterday, with the backlog of tests under investigation decreasing by 5,424 to 11,883.

A total of 569,455 doses of vaccine have now been administered, an increase of 12,922 from yesterday, with 240,669 people fully vaccinated with both doses of vaccine, an increase of 4,747 from yesterday, representing 1.63% of Ontario’s population.

There are 55 new cases in Ontario schools, a decrease of 25 from February 19, including 47 student cases and 8 staff cases. There are 15 new cases in licensed child care settings in Ontario, an increase of 1 from February 19, with 14 cases among children and 1 case among staff.

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 14 new cases to report, including 8 in Northumberland, 4 in Peterborough, and 2 in Kawartha Lakes. There are no new new cases to report in Hastings Prince Edward or Haliburton.

An additional 18 cases have been resolved, including 7 in Kawartha Lakes, 7 in Northumberland, and 4 in Peterborough.

There are currently 96 active cases in the greater Kawarthas region, a decrease of 3 from yesterday, including 41 in Peterborough, 22 in Northumberland, 20 in Kawartha Lakes, 12 in Hastings Prince Edward (1 in Quinte West, 6 in Belleville, 2 in Tyendinaga & Deseronto, 2 in Prince Edward County, 1 in Central Hastings), and 1 in Haliburton.

Since the pandemic began in the greater Kawarthas region, there have been 611 confirmed positive cases in the Peterborough area (561 resolved with 9 deaths), 528 in the City of Kawartha Lakes (468 resolved with 53 deaths), 430 in Northumberland County (397 resolved with 11 deaths), 51 in Haliburton County (50 resolved with no deaths), and 395 in Hastings and Prince Edward counties (377 resolved with 6 deaths). The most recent death was reported in Hastings Prince Edward on February 20.

The provincial data in this report is pulled from Ontario’s integrated Public Health Information System (iPHIS) at 12 p.m. the previous day. Data from local health units is more current and is usually reflected in the provincial data the following day. There may be discrepancies between the Ontario data reported today (which is from yesterday) and the local health unit data reported today (which is from today).

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Peterborough Public Health

Peterborough Public Health’s service area is the City and County of Peterborough and the Hiawatha and Curve Lake First Nations.

The health unit provides daily reports, including on weekends, excluding statutory holidays.

Confirmed positive: 611 (increase of 4)
Active cases: 41 (no change)
Close contacts: 242 (increase of 3)
Deaths: 9 (no change)
Resolved: 561 (increase of 4)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 24 (no change)*
Total tests completed: Over 43,100 (increase of 50)
Outbreaks: Buckhorn Day Care and Nursery School (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 976 (as of February 19)

*As of February 22, Peterborough Regional Health Centre is reporting fewer than 5 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 (no change) and 17 patients transferred from other areas as a result of a provincial directive (no change).

 

Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit

The Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit’s service area is the City of Kawartha Lakes, Northumberland County, and Haliburton County.

The health unit provides reports from Monday to Saturday, excluding Sundays and statutory holidays. These numbers are from February 21 and 22.

Confirmed positive: 1,009, including 528 in Kawartha Lakes, 430 in Northumberland, and 51 in Haliburton (increase of 10, including 2 in Kawartha Lakes and 8 in Northumberland)*
Active cases: 43, including 20 in Kawartha Lakes, 22 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (net decrease of 3)
Probable cases: 1 in Kawartha Lakes (net decrease of 2)
High-risk contacts: 154, including 71 in Kawartha Lakes, 74 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (increase of 14)**
Hospitalizations (total to date): 44, including 27 in Kawartha Lakes, 15 in Northumberland, and 2 in Haliburton (no change)***
Deaths (including among probable cases): 64, including 53 in Kawartha Lakes and 11 in Northumberland (no change)
Resolved: 915, including 468 in Kawartha Lakes, 397 in Northumberland, 50 in Haliburton (increase of 14, including 7 in Kawartha Lakes and 7 in Northumberland)
Tests completed: 138,863 (increase of 366)
Institutional outbreaks: Caressant Care McLaughlin Road long-term care home in Lindsay, Regency long-term care home in Port Hope, Warkworth Place in Warkworth (no change)

*The health unit states that total counts and counts for individual counties may fluctuate from previously reported counts as cases are transferred to or from the health unit based on case investigation details and routine data cleaning.

**This total includes an additional 9 high-risk contacts directly followed up through the Public Health Ontario contact tracing process that are missing the contacts’ county.

***As of February 22, Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay reports no patients are hospitalized with COVID-19 (decrease of 1).

 

Hastings Prince Edward Public Health

Hastings Prince Edward Public Health’s service area is Hastings County (including Bancroft) and Prince Edward County.

The health unit provides daily reports, including on weekends, excluding statutory holidays.

Confirmed positive: 395 (no change)
Active cases: 12 (no change)
Deaths: 6 (no change)
Currently hospitalized: 0 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU: 0 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU on ventilator (total to date): 0 (no change)
Resolved: 377 (no change)
Tests completed: 60,809 (increase of 281)
Vaccines administered: 1,850 (increase of 367)
Institutional outbreaks: None (no change)

Advertisement - content continues below

 

 

Province of Ontario

Confirmed positive: 294,144 (increase of 1,058)
7-day average of daily new cases: 1,045 (increase of 14)
Resolved: 276,937 (increase of 1,083, 94.2% of all cases)
Positivity rate: 3.3% (increase of 0.6%)
Hospitalizations: 646 (decrease of 14)*
Hospitalizations in ICU: 280 (increase of 3)
Hospitalizations in ICU on ventilator: 189 (increase of 8)
Deaths: 6,872 (increase of 11)
7-day average of daily new deaths: 24 (no change)
Deaths of residents in long-term care homes: 3,857 (increase of 4)
Total tests completed: 10,725,321 (increase of 31,163)
Tests under investigation: 11,883 (decrease of 5,424)
Vaccination doses administered: 569,455 (increase of 12,922)
People fully vaccinated (two doses): 240,669 (increase of 4,747), 1.63% of Ontario’s population
Total COVID-19 variant cases: 390 of B.1.1.7 UK variant (decrease of 1); 9 of B.1.351 South Africa variant (no change); 1 of P.1 Brazilian variant (no change)

*More than 10% of hospitals did not submit data for this report, so the actual number of hospitalizations may be higher than is shown here.

COVID-19 cases in Ontario from January 22 - February 21, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 cases in Ontario from January 22 – February 21, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from January 22 - February 21, 2021. The red line is the number of tests completed daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from January 22 – February 21, 2021. The red line is the number of tests completed daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from January 22 - February 21, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of hospitalizations, the purple line is the daily number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs, and the dotted orange line is a five-day moving average of is a five-day moving average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from January 22 – February 21, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of hospitalizations, the purple line is the daily number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs, and the dotted orange line is a five-day moving average of is a five-day moving average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from January 22 - February 21, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from January 22 – February 21, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from January 22 - February 21, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from January 22 – February 21, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day moving average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)

 

For more information about COVID-19 in Ontario, visit covid-19.ontario.ca.

Become a #kawarthaNOW fan

29,709FollowersLike
24,879FollowersFollow
17,768FollowersFollow
4,279FollowersFollow
3,436FollowersFollow
2,875FollowersFollow

Sign up for kawarthNOW's Enews

Sign up for our VIP Enews

kawarthaNOW.com offers two enews options to help readers stay in the know. Our VIP enews is delivered weekly every Wednesday morning and includes exclusive giveaways, and our news digest is delivered daily every morning. You can subscribe to one or both.




Submit your event for FREE!

Use our event submission form to post your event on our website — for free. To submit editorial content or ideas, please contact us.