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KNosh News – May 2021

The Crepes of Wrath opened during the pandemic on Hunter Street in Peterborough. Pictured is the Classical Gas, filled with banana nutella and strawberry, and the AFP, filled with apple pie filling, graham crackers, caramel, and cinnamon. (Photo: The Crepes of Wrath)

This month, food writer Eva Fisher checks out Peterborough’s The Crepes of Wrath, signs up for a beer subscription with Haven Brewing Company, cooks from home with PTBO Cooks, and gets the scoop on Central Smith’s newly renovated ice cream parlour in Selwyn Township.

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The Crepes of Wrath offers exciting flavours that don’t fall flat

The Ham n' Egger crepe at The Crepes of Wrath  contains one egg, ham, prosciutto, mushroom, onion, greens, white cheese mix, garlic aioli, and a light drizzle of hot sauce. (Photo: The Crepes of Wrath)
The Ham n’ Egger crepe at The Crepes of Wrath contains one egg, ham, prosciutto, mushroom, onion, greens, white cheese mix, garlic aioli, and a light drizzle of hot sauce. (Photo: The Crepes of Wrath)

You must be bold to open a new restaurant during a pandemic, but just a peek at the menu of The Crepes of Wrath is sure to convince you: this creperie is coming in hot.

The Crepes of Wrath (170 Hunter St. W., Peterborough, 705-742-0004) opened last November, offering sweet crepes, savoury crepes and, by request, a very decadent crepe mille feuille.

Owner Brian Goeckel has created a menu rife with pop culture references. The most popular sweet variety is the Office Karen, which is stuffed with strawberry jam, cheesecake filling, graham crackers and strawberries.

“It’s as decadent as it sounds,” Brian notes.

On the savoury side, the Get in Mah Pork Belly special has been a hit. It’s filled with roasted pork belly, Asian slaw, white cheese, greens, hoisin sauce and garlic aioli.

The Crepes of Wrath's crepe mille feuille cake features 20 crepes layered with mascarpone and lemon curd and topped with fresh berries. It measures a full 16" diameter and is 4" high. (Photo: Crepes of Wrath)
The Crepes of Wrath’s crepe mille feuille cake features 20 crepes layered with mascarpone and lemon curd and topped with fresh berries. It measures a full 16″ diameter and is 4″ high. (Photo: Crepes of Wrath)

Brian often deconstructs popular dishes to develop new crepes, and he’s not afraid to try something unusual.

“I look at my dishes and deconstruct them to suit the crepe form. Other times I just come up with zany ideas such as my Teenaged Mutant Ninja Maki which was a maki hand roll in a crepe. Yeah, I do this a lot.”

The COVID-19 pandemic has not been kind to the restaurant industry, and Brian acknowledges that it has been difficult.

“The service industries have been hit disproportionately hard. There have been days where the constant financial and mental strain hits hard. I have been fortunate so far. Somedays I’m the old man yelling at clouds.”

He stresses that it’s all of our job to look out for one another.

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“Be safe, get your vaccine shot, and look out for your neighbours,” Brian says. “I know it’s hard hearing the mantra ‘we are all in this together’ from some who don’t have the same financial insecurity, but in the end we are responsible for controlling our own actions. Jealousy, shaming, and anger doesn’t help others.”

“Get out there and help someone, a business, charity or family instead. Or just eat a crepe.”

For more information on The Crepes of Wrath, including the menu and to place an order for pickup or delivery, visit thecrepesofwrath.business.site.

 

Haven Brewing Company innovates with bold one-offs and a beer subscription service

Brothers Andrew and Nathan Anker are the owners of Haven Brewing Company in Peterborough, previously Smithaven Brewing Company. (Photo: Haven Brewing Company)
Brothers Andrew and Nathan Anker are the owners of Haven Brewing Company in Peterborough, previously Smithaven Brewing Company. (Photo: Haven Brewing Company)

Brothers Nathan and Andrew Anker have rebranded Smithaven Brewing Company after purchasing the business in April of 2020.

Now simply called Haven Brewing Company (687 Rye St. Unit 6, Peterborough, 705-743-4747), the brewery will continue to offer European-style beers crafted the traditional way, while innovating with a beer subscription service and a new line of experimental one-offs.

Andrew was part of the first graduating class of Niagara College’s Brewmaster and Brewery Operations Management Program. Prior to purchasing Haven Brewing Company with his brother, he worked as a startup consultant for nine breweries.

In addition to their traditionally made European-style beers, Haven Brewing Company has released a limited edition series of experimental one-offs that they call the Havoc Series. (Photo: Haven Brewing Company)
In addition to their traditionally made European-style beers, Haven Brewing Company has released a limited edition series of experimental one-offs that they call the Havoc Series. (Photo: Haven Brewing Company)

Nathan brings knowledge of brand development and business to the table, having honed these skills in the automotive sector.

“My intention was always to end up working for myself at some point,” Nathan says.

They are planning to keep making the traditional recipes that Smithavens became known for.

“These are recipes that are 150 to 500 years old,” Nathan notes. “They’ve stood the test of time and that is because they’re good beer.”

After purchasing Smithaven Brewing Company in April 2020, brothers Nathan and Andrew Anker have renamed and rebranded the brewery as Haven Brewing Company. (Graphic: Haven Brewing Company)
After purchasing Smithaven Brewing Company in April 2020, brothers Nathan and Andrew Anker have renamed and rebranded the brewery as Haven Brewing Company. (Graphic: Haven Brewing Company)

In addition to the classics, the brewing team have released a series of experimental one-offs that they call the Havoc Series. These include Mr Grim R’IPA (a red India Pale Ale), The Lazarus Sour Flemish Dark Ale, and the Crabby Abbey Ale (a Belgian Farmhouse Ale).

Haven Brewing Company is also now offering a monthly subscription service. You can sign up to get four six packs of beer curated for you arriving on your doorstep each month.

Shop online or sign up for a subscription at havenbrewing.ca.

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PTBO Cooks at home lessons are heating up kitchens throughout the Kawarthas

PTBO Cooks is a new series of online cooking classes offered by That's a Wrap Catering. (Graphic: PTBO Cooks)
PTBO Cooks is a new series of online cooking classes offered by That’s a Wrap Catering. (Graphic: PTBO Cooks)

Looking to add some flavour to your evenings at home? PTBO Cooks (a division of That’s a Wrap Catering in Peterborough) offers virtual cooking classes streamed right to your own kitchen.

Owner Tracey Ormond previously offered in-person classes through That’s a Wrap Catering, but the pandemic made it necessary to change formats.

“That’s A Wrap has always offered in-person classes that were about social interaction — a friend’s night out, date night, or getting together as a family. When we had to stop meeting in person it was a natural transition to have a virtual kitchen where people could participate in their own homes.”

That’s when Heather Doughty and Tiffany Arcari joined the team, and PTBO Cooks was born.

Owner Tracey Ormond (pictured) began PTBO Cooks as a division of That's a Wrap Catering, with Heather Doughty and Tiffany Arcari also on the team. When you opt for the full experience with PTBO Cooks, you can even get your ingredients delivered to your door. (Photo: PTBO Cooks)
Owner Tracey Ormond (pictured) began PTBO Cooks as a division of That’s a Wrap Catering, with Heather Doughty and Tiffany Arcari also on the team. When you opt for the full experience with PTBO Cooks, you can even get your ingredients delivered to your door. (Photo: PTBO Cooks)

Participants can sign up for a “silent seat” or for the full experience. Silent seats get the recipes and a link to join the class. They can choose to buy the ingredients and cook along with the class or just watch and learn. Those who opt for the full experience get all of the ingredients for the dish provided for them.

Have kids at home? Tracey recommends the family pizza night.

“I love when the kids or partners get involved,” she says. “It’s so much fun watching everyone interact.”

Tracey also recommends the pickling and canning class, especially for those that might be a little bit intimidated by the preserving process.

“I think this will be a great place for people to test the waters and see how fun it can be.”

Check out the full lineup of classes and book a lesson at ptbocooks.com.

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Central Smith’s scooping parlour gets a sweet new look

Central Smith's newly renovated scooping parlour has been modernized and made safer for customers and employees. (Photo: Central Smith)
Central Smith’s newly renovated scooping parlour has been modernized and made safer for customers and employees. (Photo: Central Smith)

Iconic Selwyn-based ice cream destination Central Smith (739 Lindsay Rd, Selwyn, 705-742-5867) has recently undergone a renovation to their scooping parlour.

Vice-president Jennifer Scates says the new renovation has updated their space and made it safer for everyone.

“We’ve completely transformed our scooping parlour to a new contemporary space to help keep COVID out of our building and to keep our customers and employees safe,” she explains.

The interior space has received a contemporary makeover, with new sinks, new freezers, additional square footage, and accents in Central Smith red. The cherry on top is the custom wallpaper — a pink polka dot pattern made with scoops of Central Smith strawberry ice cream.

The space features custom designed wallpaper and on-brand red accents. (Photo: Central Smith)
The space features custom designed wallpaper and on-brand red accents. (Photo: Central Smith)

There are now two takeout windows and, once the lockdown is lifted, picnic tables will be available for physically distanced customers to enjoy their ice cream in the sunshine. There’s even a bike path connecting to Creamery Road, so you can finish your visit with a walk or cycle.

Two takeout windows make it safer to grab an ice cream during the pandemic. (Photo: Central Smith)
Two takeout windows make it safer to grab an ice cream during the pandemic. (Photo: Central Smith)

Built in 1896, Central Smith originated as a farmer’s co-op, a location where farmers could go to process their milk and eggs. In 1978, it was purchased by the Scates family, who have built it into a major national ice cream manufacturer.

They make 11.4 litre tubs and ice cream bars, supplying restaurants across the country.

“Most of the chain restaurants in Canada are supplied with our ice cream,” Jennifer notes.

You don’t need to commit to 11.4 litres to bring Central Smith ice cream home with you. Locals can enjoy their handpacked variety packs. Each week you can get a variety of six flavours, each scooped into a one-litre tub.

Jennifer says that it’s a fun way to try something new.

“We’re hoping to get everyone to try at least one variety pack this season,” she says. “But if you’re super energetic and excited, by the end of the summer you’ll be able to try every one of our 72 flavours.”

For more information about Central Smith, visit www.centralsmith.ca.

Six flavour variety packs are available to take home, with the flavours changing every week. (Photo: Central Smith)
Six flavour variety packs are available to take home, with the flavours changing every week. (Photo: Central Smith)

Ontario’s chief medical officer says cases need to drop ‘well below 1,000’ before restrictions are lifted

Ontario's chief medical officer of health Dr. David Williams speaking at a media briefing at Queen's Park on May 10, 2021. (CPAC screenshot)

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

With Ontario’s state of emergency set to expire in 11 days and the province reporting 2,716 cases today, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health Dr. David Williams said daily cases need to drop well below 1,000 before Ontario can ease restrictions.

“I think it has to be well below 1,000 with the variants,” Dr. Williams said during a media briefing at Queen’s Park on Monday (May 10). “With the variants, it’s a new issue. They’re much more readily transmitted, so we have to be a lot more cautious.”

He added that, if 70% of the population is vaccinated, 500 or 600 cases per day is “achievable.”

“We’d like to do that so that, if we’re coming back down, we’re staying down,” he said. “We don’t want to go back up again. We do not want a fourth wave. We don’t want to close things back down again when we open up.”

Dr. Williams also said ICU admissions “in the range of around 200” would be necessary before the province can open back up.

With today’s new cases, the seven-day average of daily cases has decreased by 103 to 3,017 and the proportion of active cases across the province has declined for the 21st straight day. Only 5 health units are reporting triple-digit increases today.

Hospitalizations have fallen for the fifth day in a row, although not all hospitals submitted data for today’s report. There has been a large decrease in both the number of ICU patients with COVID-19 and in the number of patients on ventilators. Ontario is reporting 19 deaths today, with no new deaths in long-term care homes.

In the greater Kawarthas region, Peterborough is reporting a new COVID-19 related death, the third in the last week and the region’s 17th death. There are 43 new cases to report (including 24 in Kawartha Lakes, 9 in Northumberland, 7 in Hastings Prince Edward, 2 in Haliburton, and 1 in Peterborough) and an additional 28 cases resolved.

The number of active cases across the region has increased by 15 to 252, with the increase taking place largely in Kawartha Lakes with smaller increases in Northumberland and Haliburton. Active cases have dropped in Peterborough and remain the same in Hastings Prince Edward.

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Most of the new cases reported today are in Toronto (807), Peel (707), York (294), Durham (168), and Hamilton (106).

There are double-digit increases reported today in Niagara (96), Halton (95), Ottawa (86), Waterloo (50), Simcoe Muskoka (41), Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph (41), Windsor-Essex (35), Middlesex-London (28), Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge (24), Porcupine (20), Renfrew (20), Huron Perth (18), Southwestern (15), and Peterborough (11), with smaller increases in Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington (9), Hastings Prince Edward (8), Haldimand-Norfolk (8), and Eastern Ontario (6).

The remaining 11 health units are reporting 5 or fewer new cases, with 3 health units (Northwestern, North Bay Parry Sound, and Timiskaming) reporting no new cases at all.

Of today’s new cases, 61% are among people 39 and younger, with the highest number of cases (1,112) among people ages 20-39 followed by 741 cases among people ages 40-59 and 544 cases among people 19 and under.

With 3,110 more cases resolved since yesterday, the percentage of resolved cases has increased by 0.2% to at 91.9% — the 21st straight day the percentage of resolved cases has increased. The average positivity rate across Ontario has increased by 2.0% to 9.1%, meaning that 91 out of every 1,000 tests performed were positive for COVID-19 on May 9.

Ontario is reporting 19 new COVID-19 deaths today, with no new deaths in long-term care homes. Ontario has averaged 30 new daily deaths over the past week, an increase of 1 from yesterday.

Hospitalizations have decreased by 8 to 1,632, although more than 10% of hospitals did not submit data for today’s report, so the number of hospitalized patients may actually be higher. The number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs has decreased by 20 to 828 and the number of patients with COVID-19 on ventilators has decreased by 33 to 547.

A total of 27,175 tests were completed yesterday, with the backlog of tests under investigation decreasing by 3,248 to 12,837.

A total of 6,238,778 doses of vaccine have now been administered, an increase of 94,093 from yesterday, and 393,884 people have been fully vaccinated with both doses of vaccine, an increase of 1,049 from yesterday.

The number of fully vaccinated people represents 2.67% of Ontario’s population (no change from yesterday), with fully and partially vaccinated people representing 42.35% of the population, an increase of 0.64% from yesterday. An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

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In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 43 new cases to report, including 24 in Kawartha Lakes, 9 in Northumberland, 7 in Hastings Prince Edward, 2 in Haliburton, and 1 in Peterborough. New cases in Kawartha Lakes and Northumberland are for both May 9 and 10.

An outbreak at OPP Offender Transport Lindsay was declared on May 9, and an outbreak at an unidentified workplace in Belleville was declared on May 9.

There has been 1 new COVID-19 related death in Peterborough, the third in the last week and the region’s 17th death. There has been 1 new hospitalization in Northumberland, 1 new ICU admission in Peterborough, and 1 new ICU admission in Hastings Prince Edward.

There are 65 new regional cases of variants of concern, including 19 in Peterborough, 18 in Kawartha Lakes, 17 in Hastings Prince Edward, 9 in Northumberland, and 2 in Haliburton.

An additional 28 cases have been resolved, including 9 in Peterborough, 7 in Kawartha Lakes, 7 in Hastings Prince Edward, and 5 in Northumberland. An outbreak at an unidentified workplace in Prince Edward County was declared resolved on May 5. An outbreak at an unidentified workplace in Belleville was declared resolved on May 7.

There are currently 252 active cases in the greater Kawarthas region, an increase of 15 from yesterday, including 81 in Hastings Prince Edward (13 in Quinte West, 41 in Belleville, 1 in Tyendinaga & Deseronto, 6 in Prince Edward County, 12 in Central Hastings, and 8 in North Hastings), 65 in Peterborough, 63 in Kawartha Lakes, 36 in Northumberland, and 7 in Haliburton.

Since the pandemic began in the greater Kawarthas region, there have been 1,299 confirmed positive cases in the Peterborough area (1,217 resolved with 17 deaths), 796 in the City of Kawartha Lakes (690 resolved with 56 deaths), 852 in Northumberland County (802 resolved with 14 deaths), 110 in Haliburton County (102 resolved with 1 death), and 1,018 in Hastings and Prince Edward counties (927 resolved with 10 deaths). The most recent death was reported in Peterborough on May 10.

The provincial data in this report is pulled from Ontario’s integrated Public Health Information System (iPHIS) at 4 p.m. the previous day, as well as from systems in Toronto, Ottawa, and Middlesex-London at 2 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).

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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: 1,299 (no net change)*
Total variants of concern cases: 507 (increase of 19)
Active cases: 65 (decrease of 10)
Close contacts: 227 (decrease of 3)
Deaths: 17 (increase of 1)
Resolved: 1,217 (increase of 9)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 58 (no change)**
ICU admissions (total to date): 11 (increase of 1)
Total tests completed: Over 50,900 (increase of 100)
Outbreaks: Unidentified congregate living facility #3 in Peterborough, Unidentified workplace #5 in Peterborough, Sunshine Daycare in Peterborough, Unidentified home child care centre #1 in Peterborough County (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 60,427 (increase of 4,018 as of May 7)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,421 (increase of 210 as of May 7)

*The health unit is reporting 1 new case in the last 24 hours. The total case count has not changed because 1 case has been removed from a previous day.As of May 10, Peterborough Regional Health Centre is reporting 15 patients currently hospitalized with COVID-19 (increase of 1) and a total of 70 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 include May 9 and May 10.

Confirmed positive: 1,758, including 796 in Kawartha Lakes, 852 in Northumberland, and 110 in Haliburton (increase of 35, including 24 in Kawartha Lakes, 9 in Northumberland, and 2 in Haliburton)*
Total variants of concern cases: 469, including 186 in Kawartha Lakes, 259 in Northumberland, and 24 in Haliburton (increase of 29, including 18 in Kawartha Lakes, 9 in Northumberland, and 2 in Haliburton)
Active cases: 106, including 63 in Kawartha Lakes, 36 in Northumberland, and 7 in Haliburton (increase of 25, including 19 in Kawartha Lakes, 4 in Northumberland, and 2 in Haliburton)
Probable cases: 5 in Kawartha Lakes (net increase of 1)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 63, including 33 in Kawartha Lakes, 27 in Northumberland, and 3 in Haliburton (increase of 1 in Northumberland)**
Deaths (including among probable cases): 71, including 56 in Kawartha Lakes, 14 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (no change)
Resolved: 1,594, including 690 in Kawartha Lakes, 802 in Northumberland, and 102 in Haliburton (increase of 12, including 7 in Kawartha Lakes and 5 in Northumberland)
Tests completed: 184,488 (increase of 397)
Vaccine doses administered: 79,432 (increase of 7,067 as of May 10)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,462 (increase of 191 as of May 10)
Outbreaks: Transition House shelter in Cobourg, Staples and Swain Law Office in Lindsay, OPP Offender Transport Lindsay (increase of 1)*

*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.

**As of May 10, Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay reports 6 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 (no change).

***An outbreak at OPP Offender Transport Lindsay was declared on May 9.

 

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: 1,018 (increase of 7)
Confirmed variants of concern cases: 375 (increase of 17)
Active cases: 81 (no net change)
Deaths: 10 (no change)
Currently hospitalized: 18 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU: 8 (increase of 1)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU on ventilator: 6 (decrease of 1)
Resolved: 927 (increase of 7)
Tests completed: 135,855 (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 66,763 (increase of 40)
Outbreaks: QHC Belleville General Hospital, Unidentified workplace in Belleville, Unidentified congregate living facility in Belleville, ICU of QHC Belleville General Hospital, Unidentified child care facility in Belleville, Unidentified workplace in Belleville (net decrease of 1)*

*An outbreak at an unidentified workplace in Prince Edward County was declared resolved on May 5. An outbreak at an unidentified workplace in Belleville was declared resolved on May 7. An outbreak at an unidentified workplace in Belleville, involving 2 cases, was declared on May 9.

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Province of Ontario

Confirmed positive: 495,019 (increase of 2,716)
COVID-19 variants of concern (VOC) cases: 93,263 of B.1.1.7 UK variant (increase of 1,639); 511 of B.1.351 South Africa variant (increase of 111); 1,558 of P.1 Brazilian variant (increase of 329)
VOC R(t): 0.92 (increase of 0.03 as April 30)*
7-day average of daily new cases: 3,017 (decrease of 103)
Positivity rate: 9.1% (increase of 2.0%)
Resolved: 454,701 (increase of 3,110), 91.9% of all cases (increase of 0.2%)
Hospitalizations: 1,632 (decrease of 8)**
Hospitalizations in ICU: 828 (decrease of 20)
Hospitalizations in ICU on ventilator: 547 (decrease of 33)
Deaths: 8,327 (increase of 19)
7-day average of daily new deaths: 30 (increase of 1)
Deaths of residents in long-term care homes: 3,931 (no change)
Total tests completed: 14,529,616 (increase of 27,175)
Tests under investigation: 12,837 (decrease of 3,248)
Vaccination doses administered: 6,238,778 (increase of 94,093), 42.35% of Ontario’s population (increase of 0.64%)***
People fully vaccinated (two doses): 393,884 (increase of 1,049), 2.67% of Ontario’s population (no change)***

*R(t) is a virus’s effective reproduction number, which is the average number of new infections caused by a single infected individual at a specific time (t) in a partially immunized population. To successfully eliminate a disease from a population, R(t) needs to be less than 1.

**As more than 10% of hospitals did not submit data for this report, the number of hospitalized patients may actually be higher.

***An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 9 - May 9, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 9 – May 9, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 9 - May 9, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 9 – May 9, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 9 - May 9, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 9 – May 9, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 9 - May 9, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 9 – May 9, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 9 - May 9, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 9 – May 9, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)

 

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

Ontario further expands COVID-19 vaccine eligibility this week

The Ontario government is further expanding eligibility to book a COVID-19 vaccine during the week of May 10th.

As of 8 a.m. on Tuesday (May 11), people who cannot work from home will be eligible to book a vaccine. These include workers in grocery stores, drug stores, restaurants and liquor stores, social services and justice system workers, public transit workers, veterinarians and veterinary teams, waste management workers, and more. For a full list of eligible workers, visit the Ontario government website.

Also on Tuesday, people with at-risk health conditions will be able to book a vaccine. This includes people with immune deficiencies and autoimmune disorders, stroke and cerebrovascular disease, dementia, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, sickle cell disease, substance use disorders, and more.

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As of 8 a.m. on Thursday (May 13), anyone in Ontario turning 40 or older in 2021 will be eligible to book an appointment to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at a mass immunization clinic. Eligible people can schedule an appointment through the provincial booking system at ontario.ca/bookvaccine, or directly through those public health units that use their own booking system.

The province has also expanded the use of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines in pharmacies in hot spot areas for anyone 18 years of age and older. In Toronto and Peel, nearly 80 pharmacy locations are offering the Pfizer vaccine, with the Moderna vaccine available at as many as 60 pharmacies Durham, Hamilton, Ottawa, Windsor-Essex and York regions.

Ontario is also expanding the list of people who are eligible to book an appointment to receive their second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine earlier than four months after their first dose. This includes all First Nations, Inuit and Métis individuals and all frontline hospital staff, medical first responders (including paramedics, firefighters, and police who provide medical first response), nurses and personal support workers and essential caregivers in long-term care homes and retirement homes, and more.

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For a full list of people eligible to receive their second dose at a shortened interval people, visit the Ontario government website. Eligibility for booking will begin by the end of the week of May 10, 2021 and booking details will be provided in the coming days.

Around 800,000 doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine are expected to arrive in Ontario per week at the start of May, ramping up to 940,000 doses per week by the end of May. The province states it is on track to have administered first doses to 65 per cent of Ontarians aged 18 and over by the end of May.

Peterborough records its 16th COVID-19 death, Ontario reports 3,216 new cases

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

Ontario is reporting 3,216 new cases today, with the seven-day average of daily cases decreasing to 3,120 and the proportion of active cases across the province declining for the 20th straight day.

Toronto has the highest number of daily cases at 903, while 8 other health units are also reporting triple-digit increases.

Hospitalizations have fallen for the fourth day in a row, although not all hospitals submitted data for today’s report. There has been a small decrease in the number of ICU patients with COVID-19 and in the number of patients on ventilators.

Ontario is reporting 47 deaths today, the highest daily increase since February 18 with 47 deaths were also reported, with no new deaths in long-term care homes.

In the greater Kawarthas region, Peterborough is reporting a new COVID-19 related death, the second in the last week and the region’s 16th death. There are 16 new cases to report (including 9 in Peterborough and 7 in Hastings Prince Edward) and an additional 9 cases resolved, with the number of active cases across the region increasing by 4 (in Peterborough) to 237. See below for detailed information from each health unit in the region.

Reports are unavailable on Sundays for Kawarthas Lakes, Northumberland, and Haliburton. Information for May 9 will be included in the health unit’s report on May 10.

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Most of the new cases reported today are in Toronto (903), Peel (752), York (335), Durham (187), Ottawa (150), Halton (121), Hamilton (113), Niagara (104), and Middlesex-London (101).

There are double-digit increases reported today in Waterloo (99), Simcoe Muskoka (59), Windsor-Essex (49), Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph (41), Brant (28), Southwestern (18), Haldimand-Norfolk (18), Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge (17), Hastings Prince Edward (16), Eastern Ontario (14), Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington (14), Huron Perth (14), Lambton (12), and Peterborough (10), with smaller increases in Porcupine (7) and Grey Bruce (6).

The remaining 9 health units are reporting 5 or fewer new cases, with only 1 health unit (Leeds, Grenville & Lanark) reporting no new cases.

Of today’s new cases, 61% are among people 39 and younger, with the highest number of cases (1,282) among people ages 20-39 followed by 867 cases among people ages 40-59 and 676 cases among people 19 and under.

With 3,653 more cases resolved since yesterday, the percentage of resolved cases has increased by 0.1% to at 91.7% — the 20th straight day the percentage of resolved cases has increased. The average positivity rate across Ontario has increased by 0.3% to 7.1%, meaning that 71 out of every 1,000 tests performed were positive for COVID-19 on May 8.

Ontario is reporting 47 new COVID-19 deaths today — the highest daily increase since February 18 with 47 deaths were also reported. There have been no new deaths in long-term care homes. Ontario has averaged 29 new daily deaths over the past week, an increase of 3 from yesterday.

Hospitalizations have fallen by 192 to 1,640, although more than 10% of hospitals did not submit data for today’s report, so the number of hospitalized patients may actually be higher. The number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs has decreased by 3 to 848 and the number of patients with COVID-19 on ventilators has decreased by 8 to 580.

A total of 38,540 tests were completed yesterday, with the backlog of tests under investigation decreasing by 5,655 to 16,085.

A total of 6,144,685 doses of vaccine have now been administered, an increase of 121,075 from yesterday, and 392,835 people have been fully vaccinated with both doses of vaccine, an increase of 1,845 from yesterday.

The number of fully vaccinated people represents 2.67% of Ontario’s population, an increase of 0.02% from yesterday, with fully and partially vaccinated people representing 41.71% of the population, an increase of 0.82% from yesterday. An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

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In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 16 new cases to report, including 9 in Peterborough and 7 in Hastings Prince Edward. Updates for Kawartha Lakes, Northumberland, and Haliburton are not available as Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit does not issue reports on Sundays.

There has been 1 new COVID-19 related death in Peterborough, the second in the last week and the region’s 16th death. There has been 1 new hospitalization in Peterborough and 1 new hospitalization, 1 new ICU admission, and 1 new patient on a ventilator in Hastings Prince Edward (note: this could be the same patient).

There are 9 new regional cases of variants of concern, including 7 in Hastings Prince Edward and 2 in Peterborough.

An additional 11 cases have been resolved, including 7 in Hastings Prince Edward and 4 in Peterborough. An outbreak at an unidentified child care facility in Quinte West, involving 1 case, was declared resolved on May 7.

There are currently 237 active cases in the greater Kawarthas region, an increase of 4 from yesterday, including 81 in Hastings Prince Edward (12 in Quinte West, 44 in Belleville, 1 in Tyendinaga & Deseronto, 5 in Prince Edward County, 11 in Central Hastings, and 8 in North Hastings), 75 in Peterborough, 44 in Kawartha Lakes, 32 in Northumberland, and 5 in Haliburton.

Since the pandemic began in the greater Kawarthas region, there have been 1,299 confirmed positive cases in the Peterborough area (1,208 resolved with 16 deaths), 770 in the City of Kawartha Lakes (683 resolved with 56 deaths), 843 in Northumberland County (797 resolved with 14 deaths), 108 in Haliburton County (102 resolved with 1 death), and 1,011 in Hastings and Prince Edward counties (920 resolved with 10 deaths). The most recent death was reported in Peterborough on May 9.

The provincial data in this report is pulled from Ontario’s integrated Public Health Information System (iPHIS) at 4 p.m. the previous day, as well as from systems in Toronto, Ottawa, and Middlesex-London at 2 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).

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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: 1,299 (increase of 9)
Total variants of concern cases: 488 (increase of 2)
Active cases: 75 (increase of 4)
Close contacts: 230 (increase of 4)
Deaths: 16 (increase of 1)
Resolved: 1,208 (increase of 4)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 58 (increase of 1)*
ICU admissions (total to date): 10 (no change)
Total tests completed: Over 50,800 (increase of 100)
Outbreaks: Unidentified congregate living facility #3 in Peterborough, Unidentified workplace #5 in Peterborough, Sunshine Daycare in Peterborough, Unidentified home child care centre #1 in Peterborough County (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 60,427 (increase of 4,018 as of May 7)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,421 (increase of 210 as of May 7)

*As of May 7, Peterborough Regional Health Centre is reporting 14 patients currently hospitalized with COVID-19 (decrease of 2) and a total of 70 patients transferred from other areas as a result of a provincial directive (increase of 3).

 

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. This information is from May 8; numbers for May 9 will be included in the report for May 10.

Confirmed positive: 1,721, including 770 in Kawartha Lakes, 843 in Northumberland, and 108 in Haliburton (increase of 13, including 6 in Kawartha Lakes, 6 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)*
Total variants of concern cases: 440, including 168 in Kawartha Lakes, 250 in Northumberland, and 22 in Haliburton (increase of 16, including 13 in Kawartha Lakes, 2 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)
Active cases: 81, including 44 in Kawartha Lakes, 32 in Northumberland, and 5 in Haliburton (increase of 13, including 4 in Kawartha Lakes, 8 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)
Probable cases: 4, including 3 in Kawartha Lakes and 1 in Northumberland (increase of 1 in Kawartha Lakes)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 62, including 33 in Kawartha Lakes, 26 in Northumberland, and 3 in Haliburton (no change)**
Deaths (including among probable cases): 71, including 56 in Kawartha Lakes, 14 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (no change)
Resolved: 1,582, including 683 in Kawartha Lakes, 797 in Northumberland, and 102 in Haliburton (increase of 2 in Kawartha Lakes)
Tests completed: 184,091 (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 72,365 (increase of 7,412 as of May 3)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,271 (increase of 723 as of May 3)
Outbreaks: Transition House shelter in Cobourg, Staples and Swain Law Office in Lindsay (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.

**As of May 7, Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay reports 6 patients 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: 1,011 (increase of 7)
Confirmed variants of concern cases: 358 (increase of 7)
Active cases: 81 (no net change)
Deaths: 10 (no change)
Currently hospitalized: 18 (increase of 1)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU: 7 (increase of 1)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU on ventilator: 7 (increase of 1)
Resolved: 920 (increase of 7)
Tests completed: 135,855 (increase of 3,625)
Vaccine doses administered: 66,723 (increase of 7)
Outbreaks: Unidentified workplace in Prince Edward County, Unidentified workplace in Belleville, QHC Belleville General Hospital, Unidentified workplace in Belleville, Unidentified congregate living facility in Belleville, ICU of QHC Belleville General Hospital, Unidentified child care facility in Belleville (decrease of 1)*

*An outbreak at an unidentified child care facility in Quinte West, involving 1 case, was declared resolved on May 7.

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Province of Ontario

Confirmed positive: 492,303 (increase of 3,216)
COVID-19 variants of concern (VOC) cases: 91,624 of B.1.1.7 UK variant (increase of 2,010); 400 of B.1.351 South Africa variant (increase of 5); 1,229 of P.1 Brazilian variant (increase of 17)
VOC R(t): 0.92 (increase of 0.03 as April 30)*
7-day average of daily new cases: 3,120 (decrease of 73)
Positivity rate: 7.1% (increase of .03%)
Resolved: 451,591 (increase of 3,653), 91.7% of all cases (increase of 0.1%)
Hospitalizations: 1,640 (decrease of 192)**
Hospitalizations in ICU: 848 (decrease of 3)
Hospitalizations in ICU on ventilator: 580 (decrease of 8)
Deaths: 8,308 (increase of 47)
7-day average of daily new deaths: 29 (increase of 3)
Deaths of residents in long-term care homes: 3,931 (no change)
Total tests completed: 14,502,441 (increase of 38,540)
Tests under investigation: 16,085 (decrease of 5,655)
Vaccination doses administered: 6,144,685 (increase of 121,075), 41.71% of Ontario’s population (increase of 0.82%)***
People fully vaccinated (two doses): 392,835 (increase of 1,845), 2.67% of Ontario’s population (increase of 0.02%)***

*R(t) is a virus’s effective reproduction number, which is the average number of new infections caused by a single infected individual at a specific time (t) in a partially immunized population. To successfully eliminate a disease from a population, R(t) needs to be less than 1.

**As more than 10% of hospitals did not submit data for this report, the number of hospitalized patients may actually be higher.

***An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 8 - May 8, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 8 – May 8, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 8 - May 8, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 8 – May 8, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 8 - May 8, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 8 – May 8, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 8 - May 8, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 8 – May 8, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 8 - May 8, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 8 – May 8, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)

 

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

Our top nine Instagram photographers for April 2021

This photo of a misty country backroad in Selwyn Township by Memtyme was our top Instagram post in April 2021 with more than 13,600 impressions. (Photo: Memtyme @memtyme / Instagram)

April is my favourite month, second to none. I’m biased because it’s my birthday month, but I think it’s more about the return of spring, new growth, and a promise of a new year.

For me it is the new year and there are so many reasons to love this month. April rain is a promise of the lush summer to come. The wildlife returns. The spring melt is a reminder that winter does indeed pass, eventually. When April is here, there is hope.

I hope that you enjoy our April photographs as much as I have enjoyed posting them. As always, we are grateful to our local photographers for allowing us to post and share their work.

Do you want to get on our top photographers list? All you need is an Insta account and to tag us using our hashtag #kawarthanow when posting your photo.

We share photos from across our readership area, which is the five-county area surrounding Peterborough which includes Peterborough, Northumberland, City of Kawartha Lakes, Haliburton, and Hastings (we sneak in the occasional Algonquin Park picture as well, particularly if it’s by a Kawartha photographer).

To see our daily shares of photos, follow us on Instagram @kawarthanow and check out our feed’s highlight reels for recaps of every month in 2021.

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#1. Misty country backroad in Selwyn Township by Memtyme @memtyme

Posted April 16, 2021. 13.6K impressions, 1,152 likes

 

#2. Kawartha Lakes island sunrise by Fred Thornhill @kawarthavisions

Posted April 24, 2021. 12.8K impressions, 887 likes

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#3. Great Blue Heron by Brian Parypa @bparypa73

Posted April 28, 2021. 11.3K impressions, 931 likes

 

#4. Red sky at night in Millbrook by Kirk Hillsley @kirkhillsley

Posted April 19, 2021. 11.1K impressions, 894 likes

 

#5. Bobcaygeon sunrise by Andrea McClure @andrea_mcclure

Posted April 12, 2021. 10.1K impressions, 803 likes

 

#6. Easter Sunday sunrise over Pigeon Lake by Andrea McClure @andrea_mcclure

Posted April 5, 2021. 9.9K impressions, 764 likes

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#7. Burleigh Falls by Liv Photography @live_e_van_art

Posted April 18, 2021. 9.9K impressions, 710 likes

 

#8. Spring melt at Burleigh Falls by Robert A. Metcalfe @robert.a.metcalfe

Posted April 6, 2021. 9.8K impressions, 660 likes

 

#9. Springtime in Peterborough by Tim Haan @tim.haan.photography

Posted April 22, 2021. 9.6K impressions, 783 likes

Ontario reports 2,864 new COVID-19 cases, including 40 in greater Kawarthas region

Nurse Simone Jackson wearing personal protective equipment in March 2020 as she prepares to open a swab to test a patient for COVID-19 in Peterborough Public Health's clinic. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough Public Health)

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

Ontario is reporting 2,864 new cases today, with the seven-day average of daily cases decreasing to 3,193 and the proportion of active cases across the province declining for the 19th straight day.

Peel has overtaken Toronto today as the region with the highest number of daily cases at 803, while Toronto and 6 other health units are also reporting triple-digit increases.

Hospitalizations have fallen for the third day in a row, with a small decrease in the number of ICU patients and a larger decrease in the number of patients on ventilators. Ontario is reporting 25 deaths today, with no new deaths in long-term care homes.

Ontario has now administered over 6 million vaccine doses, with more than 40% of the population having received at least 1 dose.

In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 40 new cases to report (including 17 in Hastings Prince Edward, 10 in Peterborough, 6 in Kawartha Lakes, 6 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton) and an additional 20 cases resolved, with the number of active cases climbing by 20 to 233. See below for detailed information from each health unit in the region.

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Most of the new cases reported today are in Peel (803), Toronto (684), York (285), Hamilton (133), Durham (125), Middlesex-London (110), Ottawa (107), and Niagara (105).

There are double-digit increases reported today in Halton (98), Waterloo (72), Simcoe Muskoka (60), Windsor-Essex (39), Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph (35), Southwestern (31), Eastern Ontario (23), Porcupine (20), Haldimand-Norfolk (20), Northwestern (18), Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge (15), Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington (11), and Leeds, Grenville & Lanark (10), with smaller increases in Huron Perth (9), Hastings Prince Edward (8), Thunder Bay (7), Peterborough (7), and Lambton (6).

The remaining 8 health units are reporting 5 or fewer new cases, with only 1 health unit (Algoma) reporting no new cases.

Of today’s new cases, 61% are among people 39 and younger, with the highest number of cases (1,213) among people ages 20-39 followed by 757 cases among people ages 40-59 and 531 cases among people 19 and under.

With 3,596 more cases resolved since yesterday, the percentage of resolved cases has increased by 0.2% to at 91.6% — the 19th straight day the percentage of resolved cases has increased. The average positivity rate across Ontario has decreased by 0.2% to 6.8%, meaning that 68 out of every 1,000 tests performed were positive for COVID-19 on May 7.

Ontario is reporting 25 new COVID-19 deaths today, with no new deaths in long-term care homes. Ontario has averaged 26 new daily deaths over the past week, an decrease of 1 from yesterday.

The number of hospitalizations has fallen by 92 to 1,832, with the number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs decreasing by 7 to 851 and the number of patients with COVID-19 on ventilators falling by 23 to 588.

A total of 47,817 tests were completed yesterday, with the backlog of tests under investigation decreasing by 4,217 to 21,740.

A total of 6,023,610 doses of vaccine have now been administered, an increase of 138,125 from yesterday, with 390,990 people have been fully vaccinated with both doses of vaccine, an increase of 3,506 from yesterday.

The number of fully vaccinated people represents 2.65% of Ontario’s population, an increase of 0.02% from yesterday, with fully and partially vaccinated people representing 40.88% of the population, an increase of 0.94% from yesterday. An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

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In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 40 new cases to report, including 17 in Hastings Prince Edward, 10 in Peterborough, 6 in Kawartha Lakes, 6 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton. An outbreak at an unidentified child care facility in Belleville, involving 3 cases, was declared on May 7.

There are 23 new regional cases of variants of concern, including 13 in Kawartha Lakes, 7 in Hastings Prince Edward, 2 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton.

An additional 20 cases have been resolved, including 10 in Hastings Prince Edward, 8 in Peterborough, and 2 in Kawartha Lakes. An outbreak at an unidentified workplace #7 in Peterborough was declared resolved on May 7.

There are currently 233 active cases in the greater Kawarthas region, an increase of 20 from yesterday, including 81 in Hastings Prince Edward (12 in Quinte West, 44 in Belleville, 1 in Tyendinaga & Deseronto, 8 in Prince Edward County, 8 in Central Hastings, and 8 in North Hastings), 71 in Peterborough, 44 in Kawartha Lakes, 32 in Northumberland, and 5 in Haliburton.

Since the pandemic began in the greater Kawarthas region, there have been 1,290 confirmed positive cases in the Peterborough area (1,204 resolved with 15 deaths), 770 in the City of Kawartha Lakes (683 resolved with 56 deaths), 843 in Northumberland County (797 resolved with 14 deaths), 108 in Haliburton County (102 resolved with 1 death), and 1,004 in Hastings and Prince Edward counties (913 resolved with 10 deaths). The most recent death was reported in Peterborough on May 6.

The provincial data in this report is pulled from Ontario’s integrated Public Health Information System (iPHIS) at 4 p.m. the previous day, as well as from systems in Toronto, Ottawa, and Middlesex-London at 2 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).

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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: 1,290 (increase of 9)*
Total variants of concern cases: 486 (no change)
Active cases: 71 (increase of 1)
Close contacts: 226 (decrease of 13)
Deaths: 15 (no change)
Resolved: 1,204 (increase of 8)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 57 (no change)**
ICU admissions (total to date): 10 (no change)
Total tests completed: Over 50,700 (increase of 100)
Outbreaks: Unidentified congregate living facility #3 in Peterborough, Unidentified workplace #5 in Peterborough, Sunshine Daycare in Peterborough, Unidentified home child care centre #1 in Peterborough County (decrease of 1)***
Vaccine doses administered: 60,427 (increase of 4,018 as of May 7)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,421 (increase of 210 as of May 7)

*The health unit is reporting 10 new cases in the last 24 hours. The total case count has only increased by 9 because 1 case has been removed from a previous day.

**As of May 7, Peterborough Regional Health Centre is reporting 14 patients currently hospitalized with COVID-19 (decrease of 2) and a total of 70 patients transferred from other areas as a result of a provincial directive (increase of 3).

***An outbreak at an unidentified workplace #7 in Peterborough was declared resolved on May 7.

 

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: 1,721, including 770 in Kawartha Lakes, 843 in Northumberland, and 108 in Haliburton (increase of 13, including 6 in Kawartha Lakes, 6 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)*
Total variants of concern cases: 440, including 168 in Kawartha Lakes, 250 in Northumberland, and 22 in Haliburton (increase of 16, including 13 in Kawartha Lakes, 2 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)
Active cases: 81, including 44 in Kawartha Lakes, 32 in Northumberland, and 5 in Haliburton (increase of 13, including 4 in Kawartha Lakes, 8 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)
Probable cases: 4, including 3 in Kawartha Lakes and 1 in Northumberland (increase of 1 in Kawartha Lakes)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 62, including 33 in Kawartha Lakes, 26 in Northumberland, and 3 in Haliburton (no change)**
Deaths (including among probable cases): 71, including 56 in Kawartha Lakes, 14 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (no change)
Resolved: 1,582, including 683 in Kawartha Lakes, 797 in Northumberland, and 102 in Haliburton (increase of 2 in Kawartha Lakes)
Tests completed: 184,091 (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 72,365 (increase of 7,412 as of May 3)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,271 (increase of 723 as of May 3)
Outbreaks: Transition House shelter in Cobourg, Staples and Swain Law Office in Lindsay (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.

**As of May 7, Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay reports 6 patients 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: 1,004 (increase of 17)
Confirmed variants of concern cases: 351 (increase of 7)
Active cases: 81 (increase of 6)
Deaths: 10 (no change)
Currently hospitalized: 17 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU: 6 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU on ventilator: 6 (no change)
Resolved: 913 (increase of 10)
Tests completed: 132,230 (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 66,472 (increase of 742)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,612 (increase of 48)
Outbreaks: Unidentified workplace in Prince Edward County, Unidentified workplace in Belleville, QHC Belleville General Hospital, Unidentified workplace in Belleville, Unidentified congregate living facility in Belleville, Unidentified child care facility in Quinte West, ICU of QHC Belleville General Hospital, Unidentified child care facility in Belleville (increase of 1)*

*An outbreak at an unidentified child care facility in Belleville, involving 3 cases, was declared on May 7.

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Province of Ontario

Confirmed positive: 489,087 (increase of 2,864)
COVID-19 variants of concern (VOC) cases: 89,614 of B.1.1.7 UK variant (increase of 2,768); 395 of B.1.351 South Africa variant (increase of 28); 1,212 of P.1 Brazilian variant (increase of 143)
VOC R(t): 0.92 (increase of 0.03 as April 30)*
7-day average of daily new cases: 3,193 (decrease of 73)
Positivity rate: 6.8% (increase of .02%)
Resolved: 447,938 (increase of 3,596), 91.6% of all cases (increase of 0.2%)
Hospitalizations: 1,832 (decrease of 92)
Hospitalizations in ICU: 851 (decrease of 7)
Hospitalizations in ICU on ventilator: 588 (decrease of 23)
Deaths: 8,261 (increase of 25)
7-day average of daily new deaths: 26 (decrease of 1)
Deaths of residents in long-term care homes: 3,931 (no change)
Total tests completed: 14,463,901 (increase of 47,817)
Tests under investigation: 21,740 (decrease of 4,217)
Vaccination doses administered: 6,023,610 (increase of 138,125), 40.88% of Ontario’s population (increase of 0.94%)**
People fully vaccinated (two doses): 390,990 (increase of 3,506), 2.65% of Ontario’s population (increase of 0.02%)**

*R(t) is a virus’s effective reproduction number, which is the average number of new infections caused by a single infected individual at a specific time (t) in a partially immunized population. To successfully eliminate a disease from a population, R(t) needs to be less than 1.

**An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 7 - May 7, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 7 – May 7, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 7 - May 7, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 7 – May 7, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 7 - May 7, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 7 – May 7, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 7 - May 7, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 7 – May 7, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 7 - May 7, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 7 – May 7, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)

 

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

Ontario reports 3,166 new COVID-19 cases, including 33 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 3,166 new cases today, but the province notes a technical data issue means case counts from Toronto and health units in central Ontario may be underreported today. While Toronto and 6 other health units are reporting triple-digit increases, the seven-day average of daily cases has decreased to 3,266 and the number of active cases continuing to decline.

Hospitalizations have fallen for the second day in a row, with a significant decrease in the number of ICU patients, but the number of patients on ventilators has increased. Ontario is reporting 23 deaths today, including 2 in long-term care homes.

Ontario administered 144,724 vaccine doses yesterday, the highest number since vaccinations began, with almost 40% of the population now having received at least a single dose.

In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 33 new cases to report (including 13 in Kawartha Lakes, 9 in Hastings Prince Edward, 8 in Peterborough, 2 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton) and an additional 24 cases resolved, with the number of active cases climbing by 9 to 213.

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Most of the new cases reported today are in Toronto (876), Peel (817), York (300), Durham (205), Hamilton (148), Halton (139), and Ottawa (106).

There are double-digit increases reported today in Middlesex-London (83), Niagara (65), Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph (65), Simcoe Muskoka (64), Waterloo (48), Brant (41), Windsor-Essex (35), Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge (19), Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington (18), Lambton (16), Eastern Ontario (15), Porcupine (14), Haldimand-Norfolk (13), Southwestern (12), Sudbury (11), and Hastings Prince Edward (11), with smaller increases in Huron Perth (9), Northwestern (7), and Peterborough (6).

The remaining 8 health units are reporting 5 or fewer new cases, with only 1 health unit (Timiskaming) reporting no new cases.

Of today’s new cases, 59% are among people 39 and younger, with the highest number of cases (1,357) among people ages 20-39 followed by 893 cases among people ages 40-59 and 497 cases among people 19 and under.

With 3,875 more cases resolved since yesterday, the percentage of resolved cases has increased by 0.2% to at 91.4% — the 18th straight day the percentage of resolved cases has increased. The average positivity rate across Ontario has increased by 0.2% to 7.0%, meaning that 70 out of every 1,000 tests performed were positive for COVID-19 on May 6.

Ontario is reporting 23 new COVID-19 deaths today, including 2 new deaths in long-term care homes. Ontario has averaged 27 new daily deaths over the past week, an increase of 1 from yesterday.

The number of hospitalizations has fallen by 19 to 1,924, with the number of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs decreasing by 19 to 858 and the number of patients with COVID-19 on ventilators increasing by 11 to 611.

A total of 51,338 tests were completed yesterday, with the backlog of tests under investigation falling by 1,329 to 25,957.

A total of 5,885,485 doses of vaccine have now been administered, an increase of 144,724 from yesterday — the highest daily increase since vaccinations began in Ontario. A total of 387,484 people have been fully vaccinated with both doses of vaccine, an increase of 2,895 from yesterday.

The number of fully vaccinated people represents 2.63% of Ontario’s population, an increase of 0.02% from yesterday, with fully and partially vaccinated people representing 39.95% of the population, an increase of 0.98% from yesterday. An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

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In the greater Kawarthas region, there are 33 new cases to report, including 13 in Kawartha Lakes, 9 in Hastings Prince Edward, 8 in Peterborough, 2 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton. An outbreak at Staples and Swain Law Office in Lindsay was declared on May 6.

There are 16 new regional cases of variants of concern, including 12 in Kawartha Lakes, 2 in Hastings Prince Edward, 1 in Peterborough, and 1 in Northumberland.

There is 1 new hospitalization in Hastings Prince Edward, and 1 new ICU admission in Peterborough.

An additional 24 cases have been resolved, including 9 in Hastings Prince Edward, 6 in Kawartha Lakes, 5 in Peterborough, 3 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton.

There are currently 213 active cases in the greater Kawarthas region, an increase of 9 from yesterday, including 75 in Hastings Prince Edward (13 in Quinte West, 42 in Belleville, 1 in Tyendinaga & Deseronto, 8 in Prince Edward County, 6 in Central Hastings, and 5 in North Hastings), 70 in Peterborough, 40 in Kawartha Lakes, 24 in Northumberland, and 4 in Haliburton.

Since the pandemic began in the greater Kawarthas region, there have been 1,281 confirmed positive cases in the Peterborough area (1,196 resolved with 15 deaths), 764 in the City of Kawartha Lakes (681 resolved with 56 deaths), 835 in Northumberland County (797 resolved with 14 deaths), 107 in Haliburton County (102 resolved with 1 death), and 988 in Hastings and Prince Edward counties (903 resolved with 10 deaths). The most recent death was reported in Peterborough on May 6.

The provincial data in this report is pulled from Ontario’s integrated Public Health Information System (iPHIS) at 4 p.m. the previous day, as well as from systems in Toronto, Ottawa, and Middlesex-London at 2 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).

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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: 1,281 (increase of 7)*
Total variants of concern cases: 486 (increase of 1)
Active cases: 70 (increase of 2)
Close contacts: 239 (increase of 23)
Deaths: 15 (no change)
Resolved: 1,196 (increase of 5)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 57 (no change)**
ICU admissions (total to date): 10 (increase of 1)
Total tests completed: Over 50,600 (increase of 100)
Outbreaks: Unidentified congregate living facility #3 in Peterborough, Unidentified workplace #5 in Peterborough, Unidentified workplace #7 in Peterborough, Sunshine Daycare in Peterborough, Unidentified home child care centre #1 in Peterborough County (no change)
Vaccine doses administered: 60,427 (increase of 4,018 as of May 7)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,421 (increase of 210 as of May 7)

*The health unit is reporting 8 new cases in the last 24 hours. The total case count has increased by 7 because 1 case has been removed from a previous day.

**As of May 7, Peterborough Regional Health Centre is reporting 14 patients currently hospitalized with COVID-19 (decrease of 2) and a total of 70 patients transferred from other areas as a result of a provincial directive (increase of 3).

 

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: 1,706, including 764 in Kawartha Lakes, 835 in Northumberland, and 107 in Haliburton (increase of 15, including 13 in Kawartha Lakes, 2 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)*
Total variants of concern cases: 424, including 155 in Kawartha Lakes, 248 in Northumberland, and 21 in Haliburton (increase of 13, including 12 in Kawartha Lakes and 1 in Northumberland)
Active cases: 68, including 40 in Kawartha Lakes, 24 in Northumberland, and 4 in Haliburton (net increase of 7)
Probable cases: 3, including 2 in Kawartha Lakes and 1 in Northumberland (no change)
Hospitalizations (total to date): 62, including 33 in Kawartha Lakes, 26 in Northumberland, and 3 in Haliburton (no change)**
Deaths (including among probable cases): 71, including 56 in Kawartha Lakes, 14 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton (no change)
Resolved: 1,580, including 681 in Kawartha Lakes, 797 in Northumberland, and 102 in Haliburton (increase of 10, including 6 in Kawartha Lakes, 3 in Northumberland, and 1 in Haliburton)
Tests completed: 184,091 (increase of 643)
Vaccine doses administered: 72,365 (increase of 7,412 as of May 3)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,271 (increase of 723 as of May 3)
Outbreaks: Transition House shelter in Cobourg, Staples and Swain Law Office in Lindsay (increase of 1)***

*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.

**As of May 7, Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay reports 6 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 (decrease of 1).

***An outbreak at Staples and Swain Law Office in Lindsay was declared on May 6.

 

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: 988 (increase of 9)
Confirmed variants of concern cases: 344 (increase of 2)
Active cases: 75 (no net change)
Deaths: 10 (no change)
Currently hospitalized: 17 (increase of 1)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU: 6 (no change)
Currently hospitalized and in ICU on ventilator: 6 (no change)
Resolved: 903 (increase of 8)
Tests completed: 132,230 (increase of 9)
Vaccine doses administered: 65,730 (increase of 1,069)
Number of people fully vaccinated: 4,564 (increase of 56)
Outbreaks: Unidentified workplace in Prince Edward County, Unidentified workplace in Belleville, QHC Belleville General Hospital, Unidentified workplace in Belleville, Unidentified congregate living facility in Belleville, Unidentified child care facility in Quinte West, ICU of QHC Belleville General Hospital (no change)

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Province of Ontario

Confirmed positive: 486,223 (increase of 3,166)*
COVID-19 variants of concern (VOC) cases: 86,846 of B.1.1.7 UK variant (increase of 3,496); 367 of B.1.351 South Africa variant (increase of 41); 1,069 of P.1 Brazilian variant (increase of 14)
VOC R(t): 0.92 (increase of 0.03 as April 30)**
7-day average of daily new cases: 3,266 (decrease of 103)
Positivity rate: 7.0% (increase of .02%)
Resolved: 444,342 (increase of 3,875), 91.4% of all cases (increase of 0.2%)
Hospitalizations: 1,924 (decrease of 40)
Hospitalizations in ICU: 858 (decrease of 19)
Hospitalizations in ICU on ventilator: 611 (increase of 11)
Deaths: 8,236 (increase of 23)
7-day average of daily new deaths: 27 (increase of 1)
Deaths of residents in long-term care homes: 3,931 (increase of 2)
Total tests completed: 14,416,084 (increase of 51,338)
Tests under investigation: 25,957 (decrease of 1,329)
Vaccination doses administered: 5,885,485 (increase of 144,724), 39.95% of Ontario’s population (increase of 0.98%)***
People fully vaccinated (two doses): 387,484 (increase of 2,895), 2.63% of Ontario’s population (increase of 0.02%)***

*The government states that, due to a technical data issue, today’s case count may be underreported for the central east, central west, and Toronto regions.

**R(t) is a virus’s effective reproduction number, which is the average number of new infections caused by a single infected individual at a specific time (t) in a partially immunized population. To successfully eliminate a disease from a population, R(t) needs to be less than 1.

***An estimated 70-90% of the population must be immunized to achieve herd immunity.

COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 6 - May 6, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 cases in Ontario from April 6 – May 6, 2021. The red line is the number of new cases reported daily, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of new cases. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 6 - May 6, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 tests completed in Ontario from April 6 – May 6, 2021. The red line is the daily number of tests completed, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of tests completed. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 6 - May 6, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 hospitalizations and ICU admissions in Ontario from April 6 – May 6, 2021. The red line is the daily number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, the dotted green line is a five-day rolling 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 rolling average of patients with COVID-19 in ICUs. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 6 - May 6, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 deaths in Ontario from April 6 – May 6, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily deaths, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily deaths. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 6 - May 6, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)
COVID-19 vaccine doses administered in Ontario from April 6 – May 6, 2021. The red line is the cumulative number of daily doses administered, and the dotted green line is a five-day rolling average of daily doses. (Graphic: kawarthaNOW.com)

 

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

People refusing vaccine at Peterborough vaccination clinic leaves medical officer of health ‘dumbfounded’

Like the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, the Moderna vaccine is a messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine. Studies have shown both Pfizer and Moderna are over 90 per cent effective in protecting against COVID-19, starting 14 days after the first dose. (Photo courtesy of Peterborough Public Health)

For all the surprises COVID-19 has presented over the course of the pandemic, people’s refusal to be vaccinated while at a vaccination clinic in Peterborough remains the most baffling of them all to the region’s medical officer of health.

During a Peterborough Public Health media briefing held Friday (May 7), Dr. Rosana Salvaterra noted “a few” residents have “walked away” when they learned that the Moderna vaccine was going to be administered to them.

“I find that extremely disappointing and hard to understand,” she said, advising people to call the provincial vaccine information line at 1-888-999-6488 to have any vaccine-related questions answered.

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“I was dumbfounded when I heard that there were 25 people yesterday at the Evinrude Centre (clinic) who turned around and walked out and gave up their chance to be immunized when they learned we are using Moderna. I have no idea why that’s the case.”

Pfizer and Moderna are equivalent vaccines, in that both use mRNA (messenger ribonucleuc acid) to trigger an immune response by teaching cells how to make a protein similar to that found on the “spike” of the virus that causes COVID-19. Studies have shown both Pfizer and Moderna are over 90 per cent effective in protecting against COVID-19, starting 14 days after the first dose.

“People need to educate themselves and take advantage of all the great materials made available that speak to the effectiveness of both the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines,” Dr. Salvaterra added. “Especially for the older population, they blow influenza vaccines out of the water.”

That strange refusal aside, close to 3,600 people have been vaccinated over the past week, bringing the total number of those who have received at least their first dose to 60,427 — close to 56,000 of those Peterborough-area residents. That brings the coverage rate to 45.4 per cent of the population. Meanwhile, 4,421 people who have received two vaccine doses and are now fully immunized.

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On Thursday (May 6), three new groups became eligible to book a vaccine appointment: people 50 years old and up, people with high-risk health conditions such as obesity as well as people with intellectual or developmental disabilities, and essential workers who can’t work from home — a large grouping that includes teachers, school bus operators, farm workers, enforcement workers and licensed child care providers.

“Pfizer has now been approved by Health Canada for anyone 12 years of age and older,” said Dr. Salvaterra, adding “Plans are underway to extend vaccination to our younger residents. We should have more information on that in the next week or two.”

On Tuesday, there were still 4,500 vaccine appointments available in the Peterborough region but, as of Friday morning, there were no appointments available to book. Dr. Salvaterra is asking for patience on the part of those eligible to book their appointment, saying “We do expect to open up more appointments next week starting on Monday (May 10).”

Next week will see vaccine eligibility extended to those 40 and up, followed by those 30 and up the week of May 17 and to those 18 and up the week of May 24.

Area residents are directed to phone the provincial call centre at 1-833-943-3900 to book their COVID vaccination appointments when they are in the age group that has become eligible. The line is open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. seven days per week.

Eligible residents can also continue to book their appointments online by visiting ontario.ca/bookvaccine.

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Dr. Salvaterra also announced the creation of a local standby vaccination list.

“Now that more people are eligible for a vaccine, it helps us prevent any vaccine wastage by using up leftover doses at the end of the clinic day,” she explained. “The list is not a guaranteed way to get immunized, so book through the provincial system. But if you like, you can also sign up for this standby list.”

“We limit it to 100 people and it opens up as space permits. You can sign up for it on our website on the vaccine clinics page. To get on the list, you must be eligible for a vaccine and you must not have received your first dose. You must be available and reachable between 3 and 7 p.m. seven days a week and you have to be within 30 minutes drive of any of our clinics.”

Residents can sign up for the extra dose standby list at s-ca.chkmkt.com/?e=228538&h=BEB7DD32BB15A73.

As of Thursday (May 6) at 4:30 p.m., the number of active cases in Peterborough city and county, Curve Lake, and Hiawatha was reported as 68 — down 14 from last Thursday. Since Monday, 32 new cases have been detected locally with the number of new cases in May at 47.

However, the number of close contacts of positive cases being closely monitored by public health staff has gone up after decreasing in recent weeks, now at 216, up 23 this week.

There are currently five active outbreaks in the region, including two in daycare settings. Two outbreaks have been declared over, including a longstanding one at Empress Gardens Retirement Residence that led to two COVID-related deaths.

Dr. Salvaterra also reported an additional death, bringing to 15 the number of local people who have died from the virus over the course of the pandemic. She had no details on that death as it occurred just recently.

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With Ontario public health officials hinting that an extension of the provincial lockdown until the end of June is a distinct possibility, Dr. Salvaterra says “We do need to see those (provincial case) numbers come down before we open up.”

“I don’t want to see a repeat of what happened in February. Until we see those numbers come down, we have to sit tight. What we don’t want is a fourth wave. We want to come out of this and we want to stay out of it.”

Also commenting during Friday’s briefing were Peterborough Mayor Diane Therrien, and Peterborough board of health chair and Selwyn mayor Andy Mitchell.

Drew Hayden Taylor’s new TV series ‘Going Native’ is just what this pandemic needs

Celebrated humourist and author Drew Hayden Taylor from Curve Lake First Nation is the host of "Going Native", which premieres on APTN on May 8, 2021. The series take both a humourous and serious look at Indigenous sterotypes and traditions and how Indigenous people are reshaping their culture in the 21st century. (Photo courtesy of Ice River Films)

Need to lighten your lockdown? Drew Hayden Taylor’s new 13-episode television series Going Native will fill you with inspiration, wisdom, wonder, and laughs — frankly, it’s just what this soul-sucking pandemic needs.

Taylor is a truly prolific Anishinaabe artist from Curve Lake First Nation with an immense body of work spanning across multiple genres and media. An award-winning playwright, novelist, journalist/columnist, humourist, screenwriter, and filmmaker, Taylor has authored more than 20 published plays with nearly 100 productions to date, 33 works of fiction and non-fiction, and too many articles and columns to count.

Whether travelling the world to lecture or hold artist residencies at prestigious institutions, performing stand-up comedy at the Kennedy Centre in Washington DC, being a regular CBC commentator, or being the master of ceremonies at major cultural events, Taylor has done it all.

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He’s kind of a big deal. So is the world premiere on Saturday (May 8) of the first season of Going Native on APTN, Canada’s national Indigenous network.

“It’s quite exciting,” says Taylor in a Zoom interview. “And of course, the best news is the fact that they [APTN] liked what we did so much that they’ve already given us a second season. So we’re starting work on season two as we speak.”

In the first season, Taylor focuses his comedic lens on the ways Indigenous peoples have changed the world and are reshaping their culture in the 21st century.

VIDEO: “Going Native” trailer

Written, produced, and hosted by Taylor, the series is described as ‘IndigiGonzo’ — a reference to the gonzo journalism style founded by the late American writer Hunter S. Thompson that relies on the reporter’s personal involvement in the story.

Each episode is its own unique adventure, tied together by Taylor’s perspective, that examines a new aspect of Indigenous life. From architecture to pop culture, Taylor takes viewers on a journey across Turtle Island, exploring everything from the weird and wacky to the deep and profound ways Indigenous peoples impact the world.

The series, which has been in the works for the last two years, with shooting miraculously wrapped before the pandemic hit, was filmed across 45 locations in Canada and the US.

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“We put some miles on getting the show together,” Taylor laughs.

“Going to the American Southwest was especially wonderful for me because I had been there in 1983 and then again in 2019. So there’s almost a 40-year difference there, and it was just so amazing to be on the same trip, all those years apart — once as a young man, once as a much older man. That was a special favourite for me.”

“And the people — I was given the opportunity to meet and speak with so many amazing people,” he adds. “They all helped me understand and appreciate the many different First Nation communities on Turtle Island.”

In "Going Native", host Drew Hayden Taylor examines and breaks down stereotypes of Indigenous peoples. Here he stands in front of The Wigwam Motel, a motel chain in the U.S. built during the 1930s and 1940s. As Taylor points out in an episode, the rooms are actually built in the form of teepees. (Photo courtesy of Ice River Films)
In “Going Native”, host Drew Hayden Taylor examines and breaks down stereotypes of Indigenous peoples. Here he stands in front of The Wigwam Motel, a motel chain in the U.S. built during the 1930s and 1940s. As Taylor points out in an episode, the rooms are actually built in the form of teepees. (Photo courtesy of Ice River Films)

Each half-hour episode of Going Native is a masterpiece, boasting visually striking shots, beautiful music, compelling stories and, of course, Taylor’s witty and hilarious commentary.

“We were very fortunate to partner up with Sam Karney and Andrew Wiens of Ice River films, who are excellent camera people,” says Taylor of the stunning cinematography. “They gave the show its distinctive and unique look. We’re very privileged to have them as producers and camera people on this production.”

In addition to the incredible production quality, the genius of Going Native can be found in the ways the series examines and breaks down stereotypes of Indigenous peoples.

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“When people think about Native buildings, they think about teepees, longhouses, and wigwams,” reads the show’s description. “But Drew Hayden Taylor is thinking about the revolutionary architects that are creating zero-emission communities on the West Coast.”

“When people think about Native food they think about pemmican and seal blubber, but Drew is tucking into nouveau cuisine in downtown Toronto and learning how traditional ‘companion planting’ of crops is revolutionizing today’s agriculture.”

With Going Native, Taylor, Ice River Films, and Paul Kemp Productions have created a decolonial love letter that celebrates the amazing achievements and contributions of contemporary Indigenous peoples.

VIDEO: Musician Billy Joe Greene from “Going Native”

“I have always felt this kind of series was sorely needed in the Indigenous community,” Taylor says in a media release. “If you look at a lot of the literature and media about our communities, the focus always seems to be on the negative or perhaps, more accurately, the dark, depressing, sad, bleak, and angry perspective of Indigenous life.”

“As somebody who’s travelled to over 150 First Nation communities, I know for a fact that there is so much more to us. Just down the road and across the field there’s laughter, there’s beauty, there’s the unexpected and there’s the knowledge nobody knows about.”

“Well, maybe we knew, but not everybody did. And that is where the fun begins.”

VIDEO: Architect Daniel Glenn from “Going Native”

Going Native premieres on APTN on Saturday, May 8, 2021 at 8:30 pm EDT. For more information about additional broadcasts and streaming, visit aptn.ca/goingnative/.

For more information about the show, including additional video clips, visit goingnativetv.com.

Port Hope celebrates the late Farley Mowat’s 100th birthday May 10 to 16

Canadian author and outspoken environmentalist Farley Mowat, who died in 2014, would have turned 100 years old on May 12, 2021. (Photo: Mowat family)

The late iconic Canadian author and outspoken environmentalist Farley Mowat would have turned 100 years old next Wednesday (May 12) and Port Hope will be celebrating all of next week.

Municipal council has proclaimed the week of May 10th to 16th as Farley Mowat Week. As a tribute to Mowat, Port Hope is also renaming the east side of Rotary Park — where the Farley Mowat Boat Roofed House is located, across the Ganaraska River from the Port Hope Library — as Farley Mowat Park.

The park renaming will take place during Farley Mowat Week, and a special dedication ceremony will be scheduled at a future date when gathering restrictions are no longer in place.

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“We are proud to celebrate the great Farley Mowat and his incredible collection of work, as well as to recognize the diversity, culture, and heritage that is integral to our community,” says Port Hope mayor Bob Sanderson. “We are privileged to have many authors and artisans in our community, who work tirelessly in the pursuit of arts and cultural awareness in Port Hope.”

Although Mowat was born in Belleville in 1921 and lived in Richmond Hill, Saskatoon, Toronto, and Cape Breton Island throughout his life, he and his second wife Claire spent their later years together in Port Hope. Mowat died on May 6, 2014, less than one week before his 93rd birthday, and is buried at St. Mark’s Anglican Church cemetery in Port Hope.

During his career, he published more than 40 works of fiction and non-fiction for adults and children, many on the subject of Canada’s Far North. Some of his best-known books are People of the Deer (1952), Lost in the Barrens (1956), Owls in the Family (1962), Never Cry Wolf (1963), and Sea of Slaughter (1984). Two of his books and one of his short stories have been made into films.

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The Rotary Club of Port Hope has planned various commemorative activities to celebrate Farley Mowat Week, including:

  • “WiFi in the Wilderness’ podcast on Monday, May 10th. In 2014, Mowat participated in a debate on CBC Radio’s The Current about Parks Canada’s plan to bring WiFi to parks, a decision Mowat called “a disastrous, quite stupid, idiotic concept”. In this podcast, Port Hope Library staff Lisa O’Leary and Cherie Madill continue the debate.
  • Readings of Mowat’s works from St. Mark’s Anglican Church from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 12th. Featuring five readers selected by St. Mark’s and Mowat’s widow Claire, the readings will take place via Zoom.
  • The announcement of the winners of the Farley Mowat Arctic-themed writing contest, which was open to children and adults in Port Hope and Arviat, Nunavut until May 1st. The awards ceremony will take place on Zoom at 4 p.m. on Friday, May 15th.
  • A themed window display of Mowat artifacts at the Mary J. Benson Branch of the Port Hope Library at 31 Queen Street, and a large display of Mowat’s books at Furby House Books at 65 Walton Street.
  • Downloadable themed activity sheets for families to celebrate Farley Mowat Week safely from home.

In addition, residents are encouraged to watch two free documentaries on the National Film Board website about Farley Mowat: Finding Farley and Ten Million Books.

For more information about Farley Mowat Week, visit www.porthope.ca.

VIDEO: Farley Mowat in 1969 on TVO’s The Education of Mike McManus

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