The federal election campaign will converge in Winnipeg Friday, where leaders of the two largest parties will be holding events.
Both Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and his Conservative counterpart Erin O’Toole will appear in the Manitoba capital for public events and to take questions from reporters.
New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh will make the campaign’s first stop at an Indigenous community when he visits the Cowessess First Nation in Saskatchewan _ a community which made a preliminary finding of 751 unmarked graves at the site of a former residential school. Singh plans to visit the gravesites.
On Thursday, the leaders battled over the right prescription to help the country’s health-care systems and how much more funding provinces require to meet their needs during and after the pandemic.
O’Toole said he would boost federal funding for provincially run health-care systems by six per cent annually. Speaking in French at a stop in Ottawa, O’Toole left the door open to offering more money if the national economy grows faster than expected, which would give federal coffers extra cash to potentially splash around.
Speaking in Victoria, B.C., where he outlined plans to improve wages and conditions in long-term care facilities, Trudeau said the country needs to invest more in health care and that his government would be there to increase provincial transfers, although he did not detail when or by how much.
Singh took aim at Trudeau over the Liberal government’s track record on health-care spending during a campaign stop in Edmonton where he highlighted his party’s pledge for a $250 million fund to help train and hire 2,000 nurses.
The NDP leader said the Liberals criticized the previous Conservative government for cutting funding to provinces in 2014, only to turn around and maintain funding increases at that level once in office.
Two-thirds of Canadians say they are in favor of keeping non-vaccinated college and university students out of class while almost six in 10 also favour barring school-aged children from in-person learning.
A Maru Public Opinion poll finds 66 per cent of Canadians want unvaccinated college and university students barred from in-person classes while 58 per cent feel school-aged kids 12 years and up should only be allowed to attend class online unless and until they get vaccinated.
Meanwhile, almost three-quarters of Canadians surveyed say they want a provincially issued vaccine status card or app rather than a passport to use as proof of vaccination.
The poll finds 70 per cent of Canadians prefer a card, like a driver’s license with a QR code, or similarly an app with a QR code that will verify their vaccine status for personal use or need. This, despite the fact most provinces already make available a paper printout version of their status.
The strongest support comes from Quebec, where 74 per cent say they favour either a card or an app. The Quebec government announced earlier this month it plans to introduce a vaccine passport system. More than 70 per cent of residents in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, British Columbia and Ontario also supported such a plan.
The idea of Canadian provinces implementing a vaccine passport system has been a point of contention with the country in the midst of a fourth wave fueled by the Delta variant. As well, more and more businesses and workplaces are now demanding proof of vaccination.
The poll of 1,504 randomly selected Canadian adults who are Maru Voice Canada online panelists was taken between August 9th and 10th and has a margin of error +/- 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.
A trio of children’s hospitals in Ontario are going to require healthcare workers be vaccinated against COVID-19 as of next month.
The Hospital for SickKids, Holland Bloorview and the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario are implementing a mandatory vaccine policy for staff, volunteers, learners and contractors which will take effect September 7, 2021.
A statement from SickKids says all staff who are eligible will need to be vaccinated unless they have a documented medical or human rights exemption. For those not in compliance after finishing an education session, “all options will be considered to effectively enforce the policy.”
What those options are was not specified in the statement and it was not immediately clear what proof the hospitals would require.
“Implementing vaccine mandate policies for our staff was not our first choice, nor was it an easy choice to make, but as health-care institutions dedicated to the health of children, we feel it is the right thing to do,” said Dr. Ronald Cohn, President and CEO of SickKids.
The policy is in line with recommendations from the Ontario Medical Association, Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario and the American Academy of Pediatrics and go beyond the recent Ford government directive which requires all healthcare workers in the province to get vaccinated or routinely tested prior to coming to work.
The hospital adds it needs to go beyond the provincial guidelines because at least 70 percent of patients and clients at all three organizations are under the age of 12 and currently not eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine.
Dr. Kieran Moore, the province’s chief medical officer of health, said the province supported the move.
“We recognize that some organizations, where a vast majority of patients are not currently eligible to be vaccinated, will need to go beyond the minimum standard set by our directive,” Moore said.
Western Canada is likely to be the main locale of Thursday’s election campaign, where two of the three national leaders will be holding events.
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau will speak in Victoria, making an announcement on support for seniors.
New Democrat head Jagmeet Singh will be Edmonton. Singh will speak on health care and campaign on behalf of local candidates — one of whom, Heather McPherson, was the only non-Conservative to win an Alberta seat in the last federal election.
Erin O’Toole’s Conservative campaign will move to Central Canada. He’ll be making an announcement in Nepean, Ont., and has scheduled two virtual telephone town halls for voters in New Brunswick and Ontario.
On Wednesday, Trudeau found himself targeted by his rivals over the cost of living, facing broadsides from Conservatives for the decade-high pace of price growth and the NDP for high housing prices.
The country’s headline inflation barometer clocked in at 3.7 per cent in July, which Statistics Canada said was the highest year-over-year increase since May 2011 as price growth accelerated from June.
In Quebec City, O’Toole said the Liberal government’s approach to the economy fuelled the increase, but also pinned blame on NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh as well. O’Toole said the inflation numbers should worry Canadians.
Asked how a Conservative government would respond, O’Toole spoke about his party’s promise to waive the GST on purchases made this December.
Speaking in Vancouver, Trudeau said he respected the independence of the central bank to set its own policies to manage inflation.
An 18-year-old man has died after being struck by a dump truck in Yorkville while on a bicycle Wednesday evening.
Officers were called to the intersection of Bloor Street and Avenue Road around 6:30 p.m.
Investigators say the cyclist and the dump truck were both travelling northbound in the curb lane on Bloor Street when the truck struck the cyclist.
The man suffered life-threatening injuries and was pronounced dead shortly after police arrived.
Toronto police Insp. Michael Williams says victim was a resident of the immediate area of University and Bloor.
The driver involved remained on the scene. Road closures were in effect for several hours, but it has since reopened.
MPP Rick Nicholls and MPP Christina Mitas are the two Progressive Conservative members who could be facing expulsion from caucus for being unvaccinated against COVID-19, according to sources.
A statement provided to 680 NEWS from Premier Ford’s press secretary early Wednesday said PC caucus members could face expulsion if they are not vaccinated.
“Due to the nature of their work, which involves daily interaction with members of the public, including the most vulnerable, it is our expectation that every single PC caucus member and candidate be vaccinated,” read the statement.
Nicholls represents Chatham-Kent-Leamington whlile Mitas is the MPP for Scarborough Centre.
The Premier has not been shy about booting members from the caucus in the past for defying or disagreeing with party policy. MPP Roman Baber was the latest to get expelled this past January when he criticized the premier’s lockdown measures.
The question of MPP’s vaccination status came to light after media reports indicated that most all opposition members had been vaccinated, but few conservative MPPs had revealed their status.
On Tuesday, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health directed healthcare and education providers to undergo regular COVID-19 testing if they haven’t received a vaccine.
NDP Leader Andrea Horwath pointed out what she felt was a contradiction in Ford’s messaging.
“On the one hand PC MPP have to get vaccinated, on the other hand those working with the most vulnerable don’t have to be,” she told 680 NEWS.
Maj. Gen. Dany Fortin is expected to be charged with one count of sexual assault in Gatineau, his lawyer has confirmed.
Fortin will release a statement once the charge has been confirmed Wednesday morning.
The former head of Canada’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout was abruptly replaced in May, five days before the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service referred a sexual misconduct investigation to the Quebec prosecution service to determine whether charges should be laid.
Fortin has denied any wrongdoing and said the allegation dates back more than 30 years.
He is also currently fighting the government in Federal Court for reinstatement to the position, alleging the decision to replace him was politically motivated and denied him due process.
Ontario will pause further reopening, start offering third COVID-19 shots to vulnerable populations, and require many health and education workers to get vaccinated against the virus or take regular tests, the government announced Tuesday.
But the province stopped short of mandating vaccines for workers in high-risk settings, drawing criticism that its new policies won’t do enough to fight a rising fourth wave driven by the extremely contagious Delta variant.
Dr. Kieran Moore, the province’s chief medical officer of health, said the latest measures were an attempt to protect the most vulnerable amid a drop in vaccine demand, the uptick in cases, and the expectation of a “difficult fall.”
“We must take assertive action to protect the health of all Ontarians,” said Moore, who has repeatedly urged residents to get vaccinated.
“The policies I am announcing today are an important link in the chain of protection that will help keep Ontario strong in the face of the fourth wave.”
Moore said reopening needs to be paused to allow time for the new policies to take effect, adding that Ontario’s vaccination rates need to be higher. Eighty one per cent residents aged 12 and older have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 73 per cent have both shots.
While the majority of Ontario’s recent cases have been in unvaccinated people, Moore emphasized that COVID-19 is spreading notably once more in high-risk settings like long-term care homes and hospitals, where people are especially vulnerable.
“I know what has been outlined for you today is a lot to process, but this is what we need to do to protect Ontarians,” he said.
The province will stay in Step 3 of its reopening plan for now, maintaining capacity limits on businesses, gatherings and other settings. The government previously said the vast majority of public health measures would be lifted once certain vaccine targets were met.
Transplant recipients, patients with certain cancers, and long-term care and retirement home residents will be offered third COVID-19 vaccine doses starting as early as this week.
Meanwhile, employers in health and education will need to have policies that ask staff to disclose their vaccination status, with proof of full vaccination or a documented medical exemption. Those who aren’t vaccinated will need to take an education session and be subject to regular tests.
Moore said that directive takes effect on Sept. 7, covering hospitals, ambulance services and community and home-care service providers. It will be similar to one already in place in long-term care homes, and mirrors staff policies introduced by some hospitals.
The top doctor said the directive outlines the “minimal standard” expected and employers can introduce stricter policies if they choose.
The Education Ministry is finalizing a similar vaccination policy for employees at all publicly funded school boards and licensed child care settings, Moore said. Staff who don’t get vaccinated will have to regularly take rapid COVID-19 tests.
Moore added that it would be “prudent” to require children aged 12 and older report their COVID-19 vaccination status when attending school.
There are also plans for vaccination policies in other high-risk settings like post-secondary institutions, retirement homes, congregate group homes, children’s treatment centres, women’s shelters and institutional foster homes, Moore said.
Premier Doug Ford has said he is opposed to mandatory vaccination policies because he believes people have a constitutional right not to take the vaccine, though he has personally been fully vaccinated.
Opposition politicians criticized the government as taking “half-measures” rather than fully mandating vaccinations for high-risk frontline jobs.
“No unvaccinated person should be providing health care to our most vulnerable, no unvaccinated person should be in a classroom with our kids,” said NDP Leader Andrea Horwath. “It’s completely unbelievable that the premier and the government don’t see this as a priority.”
Horwath, who previously advocated for a similar vaccine-or-get-tested policy before reversing her position, said there should be “zero tolerance” for dishonesty about vaccination status or COVID-19 symptoms at work.
Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, who also called Tuesday for mandatory vaccination of all legislators, accused Ford of “pandering to anti-vaxxers.”
“A mandatory vaccination disclosure and mandatory testing simply isn’t the same thing as mandatory vaccination,” he said.
The Ontario Long-Term Care Association also called for mandatory vaccinations for all direct care providers.
Other observers said the new policies indicated some progress.
The Ontario School Board Association called the planned policy for educators a “positive step” towards ensuring schools stay safe and open, while the Ontario Hospital Association said it was “pleased” to see the government lay out basic requirements for vaccination policies.
Doris Grinspun, head of the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, said the policies come too close to the start of the school year to be wholly effective, but they’d eventually help boost vaccination rates.
The province also announced it will expand eligibility for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to children born in 2009, who will turn 12 this year. Children born later than 2009 aren’t eligible to receive any COVID-19 vaccines in Canada.
A man in his 70s has been rushed to hospital after being struck by a vehicle while standing in an Etobicoke bus shelter.
Officers were called to Martin Grove Road and Eglinton Avenue just after 3 p.m. for reports of a car crashing into a bus shelter.
Police say the driver was attempting to make a turn at the intersection and lost control of the vehicle, crashing into the shelter and hitting the pedestrian.
The driver involved then fled the scene.
The vehicle was later found abandoned in a parking lot on Warrender Avenue with extensive damage to the front end. The driver has not been located.
A witness, the superintendent of the building where the vehicle was located, said he spotted the suspect head up to the second floor of the building and came back down in different clothing. The suspect then got into an Uber and left the area, leaving the vehicle behind.
The victim suffered life-threatening injuries and was taken to a trauma centre via an emergency run.
A heavy police presence is expected in the area and road closures are in effect.
New survey results suggest Justin Trudeau’s Liberals were clinging to a five-point lead on the eve of the federal election campaign.
Thirty-five per cent of decided voters who took part expressed support for the Liberals, 30 per cent for the Conservatives and 20 per cent the NDP.
Seven per cent would vote for the Bloc Québécois, which is fielding candidates only in Quebec, while five per cent supported the Greens and two per cent the People’s Party of Canada.
The online survey of 2,007 Canadians, conducted Aug. 13 to 15 by Leger in collaboration with The Canadian Press, cannot be assigned a margin of error because internet-based polls are not considered truly random samples.
Trudeau quickly framed the election that began Sunday as a referendum on the party most able to guide the country through the months and years after COVID-19 subsides.
The 36-day campaign, the shortest allowed under the election law, concludes Sept. 20.