Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

753 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Dec, 2021 04:25 PM
  • 753 COVID19 cases for Thursday

VICTORIA - British Columbia's COVID-19 cases are climbing with 753 new infections and three more deaths reported Thursday.

The Health Ministry says in a news release there are now 135 cases of the contagious Omicron variant, a steep rise from the 44 confirmed as of Sunday and reported Tuesday. Island Health saw the highest number of cases. 

  • Fraser Health: 38
  • Vancouver Coastal Health: 20
  • Interior Health: five
  • Northern Health: one
  • Island Health: 71

There are a total of 3,878 active cases of COVID-19, with 184 in hospital, including 70 people in intensive care.

The news comes after the fast-spreading Omicron variant prompted an advisory from the federal government Wednesday warning against non-essential international travel over the holidays.

B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix has said the province is also considering further public health orders on gatherings in a bid to limit the spread.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Dix are scheduled to give an update Friday at 1 p.m.

There have been 224,998 COVID-19 cases and 2,396 deaths in B.C. to date.

Fifteen per cent of eligible adults have received their third dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, while 86.8 per cent of eligible people five and older have received their first dose and 82.5 per cent have their second.

Vancouver Coastal Health had the largest share of new cases with 240, followed closely by Fraser Health with 232. Fraser Health also has the highest number of total active cases at 1,091.

An independent school in Surrey, B.C., was closed to in-person instruction Thursday due to an outbreak.

Fraser Health says in a statement 23 COVID-19 cases were identified among staff and students at Khalsa School Old Yale Road.

The Health Ministry says there have been no new health-care facility outbreaks and an outbreak at Ponderosa Lodge in the Interior Health region has been declared over.

MORE National ARTICLES

NDP pledges 20 per cent foreign buyers' tax

NDP pledges 20 per cent foreign buyers' tax
The campaign-style promise aims to drive down increasingly unaffordable rental and home prices that have rippled beyond Toronto and Vancouver into outlying towns and cities from Nova Scotia to British Columbia's Fraser Valley.

NDP pledges 20 per cent foreign buyers' tax

Hospital turned away woman sick from shot: friend

Hospital turned away woman sick from shot: friend
Alberta chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, announced Tuesday that the death of the 52-year-old woman was due to a rare blood clot disorder — one of three such fatalities in Canada.

Hospital turned away woman sick from shot: friend

Canada 'oddly absent' from waiver debate: critics

Canada 'oddly absent' from waiver debate: critics
The idea is to make vaccine formulas and expertise more widely available so more countries could develop their own supply. Canada expressed support for the U.S. decision, but has so far refused to say whether it would also support the waiver and take part in the talks.

Canada 'oddly absent' from waiver debate: critics

Feds face pressure to ease mat leave access

Feds face pressure to ease mat leave access
The Opposition Conservatives are asking the Liberals to allow expecting mothers to qualify for their full employment insurance parental leave, even if they currently receiving federal unemployment aid.    

Feds face pressure to ease mat leave access

Toronto Police need public's help in finding missing man Pritpal

Toronto Police need public's help in finding missing man Pritpal
He is described as 5'3, 230 lbs., with grey hair (worn under turban), a grey beard, brown eyes, a curved scar on his right cheek, a scar on his nose and right eyebrow, and has a tattoo on his left hand.

Toronto Police need public's help in finding missing man Pritpal

No relief in skyrocketing housing prices for Metro Vancouver for a few years: CMHC

No relief in skyrocketing housing prices for Metro Vancouver for a few years: CMHC
The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation projects by late 2023 the pace of rising home prices will slow down from 2020 highs. While the pace of prices won't rise as quickly, prices themselves will still stay high. 

No relief in skyrocketing housing prices for Metro Vancouver for a few years: CMHC