COVID-19 'Pandemic'

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
LEVY: Traveller warned to be polite to border guard or pay higher fine
Author of the article:Sue-Ann Levy
Publishing date:Apr 21, 2021 • 2 hours ago • 3 minute read • 12 Comments
Travellers from an international flight are directed to the COVID-19 testing area as part of Canada's measures against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, February 24, 2021.
Travellers from an international flight are directed to the COVID-19 testing area as part of Canada's measures against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, February 24, 2021. PHOTO BY CARLOS OSORIO /REUTERS
Article content
A Montreal man who contacted the federal COVID hotel quarantine hotline for information last week was warned that travellers who refuse to go to a COVID hotel get higher fines if they don’t behave politely when approached by a Canadian border officer.

The man, who didn’t want his name used because he’s in the travel business, said he was stunned to hear the officer on the call say that the fine starts at $3,000 and increases depending on how “disrespectful or respectful” a traveller is.


He said he couldn’t believe this is actually happening in Canada.

The man didn’t get the name of the federal call-taker who spoke with him, but he provided a tape of the conversation to the Toronto Sun.

“I can’t imagine someone getting a $3,000 fine is going to have any nice words to say,” the federal employee is heard to say, sounding like he’s enjoying the moment. “So he (the border agent) says, ‘that’s how you want to be, okay $3,500 … you’re still going, $3,600… you’re not done yet, $3,700’.”

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
The Montreal man said he called to find out whether there’s a set fine for refusing to go to a COVID hotel — both for himself and for his clients — seeing as he’s heard of many different amounts levied.

He said he’s had to travel himself for compassionate reasons four times in the past year and has spent a total of eight weeks in quarantine. But that was before the COVID jail law — which was just extended to May 21 — and he needs to travel again next month.

He said he’d originally emailed the Canada Border Services Agency and was told by return email to contact Public Health Canada or their COVID hotline at 1-833-784-4397, which is listed on a public health web page.

He called the hotline last Wednesday and taped the conversation, which he called “scandalous.”

On the tape the federal officer is heard saying that the $800 fine is “out the window” and has been for about a month — and the new amount is around $3,000 “because people are just not listening.”

He implied that people should be happy because it could be $50,000 — and he himself would “laugh” because he’s only getting a fine of $3,000.

“They’re really trying to make the people feel it,” the federal officer says.


When the Montreal man indicated it is “hard to believe this is going on in Canada,” the federal employee responds it’s tough because Canada is so nice and “hee, ha, ha” but they’ve “really lost their patience man.”

The federal employee doesn’t say who “they” are.

But he added that even people who go out of the country to bury family members — including the grandmother they grew up with who “changed their diapers” — can’t escape the hotel “when they come back.”

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
The federal employee noted that even fully-vaccinated travellers — who have AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Moderna, or “Cocerna” (the latter presumably his attempt to make a joke) — have to go to a COVID hotel.

“It doesn’t make no difference at the moment,” he is heard to say.

The Montreal man called the whole conversation “unreal” and he came away from it “more confused” than ever.

Efforts to get a response from federal government officials as to who the employee was and whether that kind of unprofessionalism was sanctioned, resulted in a confusing game of COVID musical chairs over three days.

I first contacted the media team at Health Canada at 1 p.m. on Monday, providing both the transcript of the conversation and a clip from the tape.

A few hours later I was asked for the hotline number accessed by the Montreal man, which I sent to them.

MORE ON THIS TOPIC

Health workers at the arrivals COVID-19 testing area at Terminal 1 at Toronto Pearson International Airport on January 26, 2021.
LEVY: Fully vaccinated traveller fined $3,750 for refusing hotel stay
The flight arrival lineup at Toronto's Pearson International Airport located in Terminal One on Feb. 22, 2021.
LEVY: Did traveller contract COVID at quarantine hotel?

At 5:43 p.m. Tuesday evening, Health Canada media relations advisor Andre Gagnon emailed me to say that even though the hotline number is on their web page — and the Montreal man was directed to Health Canada — Service Canada staff that COVID information line.

After a flurry of emails just after 9 a.m. Wednesday from Marie-Eve Sigouin-Campeau, of the media relations office of Employment and Social Development Canada, I did not hear another word about my request for comment the entire day or by my deadline.

SLevy@postmedia.com
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
700 pages says a lot about this pandemic, the most serious being it's getting worse instead of better. While many people are taking the necessary precautions, many aren't and those ones need to open their eyes and follow the advice of the medical professionals and NOT the likes of Donald Trump and his ilk!
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
LILLEY: Trudeau still won't act on flights from India and other hotspots
Author of the article:Brian Lilley
Publishing date:Apr 20, 2021 • 1 day ago • 3 minute read • 174 Comments
Travellers from an international flight are directed to the COVID-19 testing area as part of Canada's measures against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, February 24, 2021.
Travellers from an international flight are directed to the COVID-19 testing area as part of Canada's measures against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, February 24, 2021. PHOTO BY CARLOS OSORIO /REUTERS
Article content
April 12, the overnight Air India Flight 187 from Delhi touched down in Toronto with an unspecified number of COVID-19 positive passengers aboard.

All we know from the public data is that passengers in rows 1-4, 25-31, 34–40, and 45–51 were warned that they had been exposed to COVID by a neighbouring passenger on the flight.


It isn’t the only flight with multiple rows listed as being exposed and given the emerging evidence. It may not matter — the whole plane should be considered exposed.

Between April 1-17, 40 COVID-positive flights from Delhi landed in Canada — mostly in Toronto, but also many in Vancouver. This is on top of 26 flights from the U.S., 14 from the UAE, 11 from France, nine fromTurkey, and seven each from Germany, Qatar, and the Netherlands.

In total, Canada has seen 145 positive flights in that time and that doesn’t include flights arriving during the last three days.

“At this point, international transmission given all the different variants (is) just as worrying as community transmission. Proliferation of these variants is bad” tweeted Dr. Eric Feigl-Ding on Tuesday.

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Dr. Feigl-Ding, an epidemiologist who has worked at both Harvard and Johns Hopkins, was responding to the data on flights coming to Canada documented by my Toronto Sun colleague, Bryan Passifiume.


Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“Let this sink in — nearly every single flight from India to Toronto airport this past month has had at least a passenger carrying #COVID19. And 1/3 of all international flights landing in Toronto had COVID. We need better border quarantines,” Feigl-Ding said.



Feigl-Ding also noted news out of Hong Kong where it’s believed that a record has been set for the most COVID-positive passengers on a flight. Every passenger aboard Vistara flight 6395 from Delhi to Hong Kong tested negative within the 72 prior to departure but shortly after landing, 25 passengers tested positive.

What is more disturbing is that 22 passengers tested positive on the 12th day of their quarantine.


Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Hong Kong has now instituted a two-week ban on flights from India, Pakistan, and the Philippines to try and slow the introduction of new variants. Britain has also banned flights but don’t expect that to happen here anytime soon.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau thinks what his government is doing is just great.

“From the very beginning, from March 2020, over a year ago now, we brought in some of the toughest, most stringent travel restrictions of any of our peer countries around the world,” Trudeau said Tuesday when asked about problematic flights.

Looks like Trudeau is following the old Liberal line that if you say something loud enough and often enough, people will believe you. These “most stringent” measures allowed the U.K., South African, and Brazilian variants to enter Canada and drive this third wave.

We can expect now that the double mutant variant from India will be here soon if it hasn’t arrived already.

India is dealing with a horrible resurgence of COVID-19 driven in large part by this new variant.As I write, they have reported more than 259,000 new cases and 1,761 deaths in the previous single 24-hour period.

They are running out of oxygen in their hospitals, they have stopped exporting vaccines in order to stem the spread in their own population — that includes cancelled shipments to Canada. It is a horrible and tragic situation that has resulted in harsh lockdowns, curfews, and travel bans inside the country.

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
We are told time and again that reducing mobility will stop the spread of COVID, it’s why they have lockdowns in India, it is why we have them here. Yet the planes keep coming.

MORE ON THIS TOPIC

A frontline worker in personal protective equipment (PPE) sprays a flammable liquid on a burning funeral pyre of a man who died from COVID-19, at a crematorium on the outskirts of Mumbai India, April 15, 2021.
Non-stop cremations cast doubt on India's counting of COVID dead
Members from the Disaster Response Force (DRF) of Telangana State, wearing protective gear spray disinfectant on a street against the spread of the Covid-19 coronavirus in Hyderabad on April 19, 2021.
There’s a new 'double mutant' COVID-19 variant in India -- how worried should we be?
International arrivals at Toronto's Pearson airport.
LILLEY: India shuts down, we keep taking flights

Trudeau not only supports the current COVID restrictions that stop us from travelling inside our own country or going to a store or restaurant, he calls on premiers to do more such restrictions on a regular basis.

If he really thinks stopping mobility is key to stopping COVID-19, then Trudeau needs to do the right thing and stop the flights from India and other hotspots before it is too late.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
LILLEY: Trudeau won't stop flights as new variant lands in Canada
Author of the article:Brian Lilley
Publishing date:Apr 21, 2021 • 8 hours ago • 3 minute read • 13 Comments
An Air Canada A220-300 Airbus passenger plane arrives at Pearson International Airport on Jan.24, 2021.
An Air Canada A220-300 Airbus passenger plane arrives at Pearson International Airport on Jan.24, 2021. PHOTO BY JACK BOLAND, TORONTO SUN /Toronto Sun
Article content
Before Prime Minister Justin Trudeau got around to thinking of closing the barn door, the horse has bolted and there is no getting it back. I’m talking about the appearance of COVID-19 variant B.1.617 being discovered in a town north of Trois-Rivières, Que.

The B.1.617 variant is the double-mutant variant, first discovered in India and thought to be ripping through that country now as it deals with a horrible and deadly upsurge of COVID. With this case confirmed, it looks like we have the answer to Conservative leader Erin O’Toole’s question.


“The prime minister failed at the border last year, why is he failing again?” O’Toole asked Wednesday.

I could answer by saying Trudeau doesn’t care and has never cared to put proper border measures in place but since he stood, I’ll give you his answer.

“We have some of the strongest measures in the world,” Trudeau said while saying he will continue to look to science and data for other solutions.

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Trudeau repeated the Liberal talking point that cases from travel are “a fraction” of cases. Strange, every case in Canada actually originated somewhere else if you trace it back.

The early cases came from Wuhan in China, then Iran, Germany, Italy, Egypt, the United States.

Finally, in March 2020, Trudeau said he was closing the border, but he never did. It’s true that his government imposed travel restrictions where only Canadians — and long list of exemptions — could land in this country, but he never actually closed the border.

His much-vaunted quarantine measures are not as he has claimed, the “most stringent travel restrictions.” If the measures that Trudeau brought in worked as well as he claimed, we would not be dealing with a whole host of variants at this point.

These variants aren’t coming from Moose Jaw, they are coming into Canada from around the world. British Columbia is now home to the second-biggest outbreak of the P1 variant outside of Brazil, we also have variants first discovered in South Africa, Nigeria, the U.K., and now India.

If you don’t think there are consequences to this, consider that in January, the B.1.1.7 variant first discovered in the U.K., found its way into the Roberta Place long-term care residence in Barrie, just north of Toronto. By the time the outbreak was over, at least 70 residents and one caregiver had died and the variant had also spread to the wider community.


In late December, Trudeau had put a temporary ban on flights from Britain, the only country he’s done that to, while also saying that he had spoken with Canada’s airlines and that they had agreed to stop flying to Mexico and the Caribbean to keep sun-seekers at home.

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
This week, while refusing to join Britain, Hong Kong, and other jurisdictions in placing a temporary ban on flights from India, Trudeau announced that the ban on Canadian airlines flying south to Mexico and the Caribbean was extended until the end of May.

We can’t fly to the Dominican; the PM wants us to stay home and follow strict public health measures but flying to and from India where a new variant is driving cases and death counts higher is not a problem.

MORE ON THIS TOPIC

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland looks at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as she delivers the budget in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, April 19, 2021.
Trudeau defends Canada's travel restrictions as effective but open to doing more
Ontario Premier Doug Ford (left) and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
LILLEY: Trudeau to blame for Canada's vaccine debacle
Travellers from an international flight are directed to the COVID-19 testing area as part of Canada's measures against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, February 24, 2021.
LILLEY: Trudeau still won't act on flights from India and other hotspots

As much as I try, I fail to see the logic in any of what Trudeau is telling us. Stay home, don’t travel between provinces, don’t travel between regions, respect curfews where they exist but 40 flights in 17 days with COVID positive passengers from a known hotspot is just fine.

Once again, his words don’t match his actions. His actions are failing us.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
'Uber bully' accused of coughing on driver pleads not guilty
Author of the article:postmedia News
Publishing date:Apr 21, 2021 • 16 hours ago • 1 minute read • 21 Comments
A video of three women berating an Uber driver in San Francisco has gone viral.
A video of three women berating an Uber driver in San Francisco has gone viral. PHOTO BY SCREENGRAB /@DIONLIMTV/INSTAGRAM
Article content
A woman dubbed the “Uber bully” for allegedly coughing on a rideshare driver has pleaded not guilty to charges despite previously sharing a topless video admitting to the attack on Instagram.

Arna Kimiai surrendered to San Francisco police last month after a video posted online showed her and two other passengers involved in a violent exchange with Uber driver Subhakar Khadka on March 7.


The CCTV video showed Khadka being berated by three women in his backseat after he asked one of the women to wear a mask.

The situation escalated with Kimiai lashing out at the driver shouting, “F— the mask!” before taking off her face mask and coughing in the driver’s direction. She was also seen attempting to grab the driver’s phone from his rearview mirror.


Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Kimiai, 24, pleaded not guilty to attempted robbery and assault on a hired transportation driver on April 12.

The guilty plea came weeks after she posted a topless video on Instagram Live defending her actions.

In the since-deleted video posted under the username keepinupwforeign, Kimiai is seen wearing only a bra, the U.K. Sun reported.

MORE ON THIS TOPIC

A video of three women berating an Uber driver in San Francisco has gone viral.
Woman charged in Uber driver assault over face mask
A video of three women berating an Uber driver in San Francisco has gone viral.
'F*** THE MASK': Three women berate, cough on Uber driver in San Francisco

“All I did take his mask off and cough a little bit but I don’t even have corona,” Kimiai said.

“I ain’t gonna lie, that was disrespectful as f—. I was dead a– wrong for that.”


The video ended with her saying she didn’t like using Uber and preferred rival Lyft.

Following the actions of Uber, Lyft said Kimiai was also banned from the service.


Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Kimiai is free on bail pending a May 3 hearing.

A second woman who is accused of spraying a pepper spray-like substance inside Khadka’s car, was arrested last month in Las Vegas on a warrant from California.

Malaysia King, 24, was charged with assault with a caustic chemical, conspiracy, assault and battery and a health and safety code violation.
1619086954277.png
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
India punishes COVID rule-breakers with public humiliation
Author of the article:postmedia News
Publishing date:Apr 21, 2021 • 15 hours ago • 1 minute read • 11 Comments
Two men are seen being punished by police in Mumbai, India, for breaking COVID-19 rules.
Two men are seen being punished by police in Mumbai, India, for breaking COVID-19 rules. PHOTO BY SCREENGRAB /Reuters video
Article content
With India reporting 2,023 deaths on Wednesday, the country’s police continued their tough crackdown on COVID rule-breakers by beating and humiliating alleged offenders in public.

Police officers in Chattarpur were spotted striking young women and men with sticks and forcing them to perform squats on the street, according to the U.K.’s Daily Mail.


The world’s second-most populous nation reported 295,041 new infections on Wednesday and has been struggling to contain a new “double mutant” strain — B.1.617.

Health experts said India had let its guard down when the virus seemed to be under control during the winter, allowing big gatherings such as weddings and festivals.


The public humiliation of COVID rule-breakers has been spotted in parts of India since the start of the pandemic last year.

In March 2020, a Reuters video showed Mumbai police officers thrashing people with batons in the streets.

— with files from Reuters
1619088372932.png
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
Indian COVID-19 patients die as ventilators run out of oxygen; infections surge
Author of the article:Reuters
Reuters
Rajendra Jadhav and Aditi Shah
Publishing date:Apr 21, 2021 • 15 hours ago • 3 minute read • Join the conversation
Police personnel stand guard at the entrance of the Zakir Hussain Hospital after an oxygen tanker leaked outside the hospital, in Nashik on April 21, 2021.
Police personnel stand guard at the entrance of the Zakir Hussain Hospital after an oxygen tanker leaked outside the hospital, in Nashik on April 21, 2021. PHOTO BY VIRU KADAM /AFP via Getty Images
Article content
SATARA — At least 24 COVID-19 patients in western India died on Wednesday when the oxygen supply to their ventilators ran out, amid a nationwide shortage of the gas and a surge in infections.

Maharashtra State Health Minister Rajesh Tope confirmed the deaths at a hospital in Nashik city and said the hospital’s oxygen supply ran out because a tanker refilling it suffered a leak. Oxygen was running scarce throughout the country.


“The leakage was spotted at the tank supplying oxygen for these patients. The interrupted supply could be linked to the deaths of the patients in the hospital,” Tope said.

Hospitals in Delhi, the capital, and elsewhere have warned that their supplies of medical oxygen given to severely ill COVID-19 patients are running low.


Max Healthcare, the largest private sector healthcare provider in Delhi and its suburbs, said some of its hospitals had barely two hours’ supply of oxygen.

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Television showed images of people with empty oxygen cylinders crowding refilling facilities in the most populous state of Uttar Pradesh, as they scrambled to save stricken relatives in hospital.

The situation was so severe that some people tried to loot an oxygen tanker, forcing authorities to beef up security, according to the health minister of the northern state of Haryana.

India now faces a coronavirus “storm” overwhelming its health system, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a national address on Tuesday, adding that authorities were working with states and private firms to deliver oxygen with speed.


Authorities in Maharashtra, which is already under partial lockdown, late on Wednesday ordered additional restrictions on the movement of people within the city and state until May 1 to curb the coronavirus’ spread.

The order said all offices, except those providing essential services, must operate with 15% staff. Travel by private vehicles is permitted only for medical emergencies, and only medical workers and government employees may ride the normally popular train system.

India, the world’s second-most populous nation reported 295,041 new coronavirus infections on Wednesday – the biggest daily rise reported in any country – stretching its hospitals to breaking point, officials said.

Only the United States had a slightly higher one-day rise of 297,430 cases in January, though its tally has since fallen sharply. India’s 2,023 deaths were also its highest in the pandemic.

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Adding to the sense of alarm, the Serum Institute of India, which manufactures the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine, said it will not be able to raise its monthly output to 100 million doses from the current 60 million-70 million until July, compared to its previous forecast of late May.

The delay could slow India’s immunization drive, which the government has opened for all adults from next month to try to stem the deadly second wave.

Health experts said India had let its guard down when the virus seemed to be under control during the winter, allowing big gatherings such as weddings and festivals.

Modi is himself facing criticism for addressing packed political rallies for local elections and allowing a religious festival to go ahead where millions gathered.

India has so far administered nearly 130 million doses of vaccine, the most in the world after the United States and China but still small relative to its population of 1.35 billion people.(http://tmsnrt.rs/3tlH6Gq)

Vaccine doses have run short in many states though inoculations are currently restricted to frontline workers and those aged above 45.

Germany on Wednesday warned its citizens in India that the health risk of staying in the country had “considerably” increased due to shortage of beds in hospitals.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
British regulator says AstraZeneca COVID shot clots rise to 168
Author of the article:Reuters
Reuters
Publishing date:Apr 22, 2021 • 1 day ago • 2 minute read • 5 Comments
A medical worker prepares a dose of Oxford/AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination centre in Antwerp, Belgium, March 18, 2021.
A medical worker prepares a dose of Oxford/AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination centre in Antwerp, Belgium, March 18, 2021. PHOTO BY YVES HERMAN /REUTERS / FILES
Article content
LONDON — Britain’s medicines regulator on Thursday said there had been 168 major blood clots following a dose of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine, a rate of 7.9 clots per million doses, a jump in incidence from the previous week’s figure.

This was up from the 100 cases reported last week, when the overall case incidence was 4.9 per million doses.


There has been scrutiny of the AstraZeneca vaccine on the issue of the very rare clots and some countries, including Britain, have recommended that only people over a certain age get the shot.

Adam Finn, Professor of Paediatrics at Bristol University, said the jump in reported cases was expected.

“Cases are being reported reliably and quickly but there are also cases that occurred previously now being recognized and reported as well,” Finn said.


“I would expect the true number of cases per million doses of vaccine to become clear fairly soon as these reports stabilize but it is already clear that it is going to remain a very rare event.”

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
There have been 21.2 million first doses of AstraZeneca’s shot given in Britain’s rollout, with all except one of the side effect case reports coming after a first dose. A total was not given for second doses administered.

There were 32 reported deaths from clots in total, compared to 22 reported last week, but the fatality rate of the reported clots dropped to 19% from 22%.

Britain has advised that under-30s receive an alternative to the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, after the MHRA medicine regulator found there was evidence of a link to rare clots with low platelet levels.


Officials have emphasized the side effect is “vanishingly” rare and advised that most people still get the shots. The preference for under-30s to get a different shot is mainly informed by that age group’s low risk from COVID-19, combined with Britain’s low prevalence of infection.

That differs from several European countries such as France, which has decided to restrict use of AstraZeneca’s shot to people over 55.

“On the basis of this ongoing review, the advice remains that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the risks in the majority of people,” the MHRA said on Thursday, reiterating its advice for the shot.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
Vegas topless bars to reopen but strippers must wear masks
Author of the article:postmedia News
Publishing date:Apr 23, 2021 • 6 hours ago • 1 minute read • 13 Comments
girls body in night club
PHOTO BY FILE PHOTO /Getty Images
Article content
Those looking for a wild weekend of booze and nudity in Las Vegas will have to enjoy it under the rules accepted by Nevada’s COVID-19 task force on Thursday.

According to the Daily Mail, strippers can shed their clothes and get up close with patrons but are required to wear masks while doing so. The masked and naked dancers can perform at least three feet away from masked patrons unless they’ve received at least one jab of the COVID-19 vaccine or had a negative test in the last week.


The adult entertainment can resume May 1 in Sin City where all non-essential businesses — including casinos and clubs — were shuttered in March 2020 when the pandemic began. When the adult businesses reopen next month they can only do so at 80% capacity and under strict social distancing guidelines.

The reopening plan adopted by Las Vegas officials on Tuesday will see occupancy limits relaxed but not totally lifted for such businesses as stores, restaurants and bars, spas and karaoke clubs.

Advertisement
STORY CONTINUES BELOW

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Personal care businesses such as hair and nail salons, massage therapists and tattoo parlours will be by appointment only.

The Daily Mail reported a separate plan to lift COVID-19 restrictions almost entirely in neighbouring Washoe County (where Reno is located) was stopped after Reno officials protested citing rising case numbers.


The current 50% capacity and six-foot social distancing rules will remain.

So far, 5,400 people have died due to COVID-19 in the state of Nevada.

In cities such as Las Vegas and Reno, which depend on tourism for their economies, the lockdowns and restrictions have hurt businesses and threatened livelihoods.
 

no color

Electoral Member
May 20, 2007
349
98
28
1967 World's Fair
It’s nice to see some return to normalcy. Freedom triumphs fear. At least it’s the case in Florida. When will our politicians in Canada let us get back to a normal life?

 
  • Like
Reactions: B00Mer

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
44,800
7,297
113
Rent Free in Your Head
www.getafteritmedia.com
  • Like
Reactions: no color

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,881
3,048
113
COVID-19 hospitalization and ICU admission rates rising across Canada: Tam
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Publishing date:Apr 24, 2021 • 1 hour ago • 1 minute read • Join the conversation
Passengers arrive at the B.C. Ferries terminal as new non-essential travel restrictions between provincial health authority regions were announced, in order to help limit the spread of COVID-19, in Tsawwassen, B.C., April 23, 2021.
Passengers arrive at the B.C. Ferries terminal as new non-essential travel restrictions between provincial health authority regions were announced, in order to help limit the spread of COVID-19, in Tsawwassen, B.C., April 23, 2021. PHOTO BY JENNIFER GAUTHIER /REUTERS
Article content
OTTAWA — Canada’s Chief Public Health officer says the latest national data shows an ongoing rise in severe illness from COVID-19 is continuing to strain the country’s health-care systems and workers.

Dr. Theresa Tam says in a statement that average weekly rates of admission to hospitals, including intensive care units, continue to climb, even with a slight decline in overall new cases.


According to Tam’s numbers, an average of 4,167 COVID-19 patients were being treated in Canadian hospitals each day during the week of April 16 to 22, marking a 22% increase over the week before.

MORE ON THIS TOPIC

The Amazon Fulfillment warehouse on Heritage Rd in Brampton on Saturday, April 24, 2021.
WARMINGTON: Two Amazon centres first businesses shut down to slow COVID spread
A porter loads luggage of recently arrived air travellers from New Delhi, after Canada temporarily barred passenger flights from India and Pakistan for 30 days, at Vancouver International Airport in Richmond, B.C., April 23, 2021.
Families separated by India, Pakistan flight suspensions worry about loved ones

Tam says that includes an average of 1,268 people requiring intensive care each day, which is 21% more than in the previous week.

In that same period, the average number of new cases reported each day fell by 2.6%, which she says is a sign that public health enforcement and vaccination efforts are succeeding.

Meanwhile, Ontario Premier Doug Ford is calling once again for Ottawa to halt all non-essential travel across Canadian borders, after officials in his province reported 36 confirmed cases Friday of the B.1.617 variant first detected in India.