Saturday, June 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 cases, deaths surge ahead of long weekend

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Oct, 2020 06:41 PM
  • COVID-19 cases, deaths surge ahead of long weekend

Canadians headed into a long weekend with COVID-19 infections surging to new highs across the country, spreading to regions outside well-established hotspots and pushing weekly deaths to highs unseen since mid-June.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday the nation was "at a tipping point in this pandemic."

"Not only is the second wave underway, yesterday we hit the highest daily recorded cases — well above what we saw this spring," Trudeau said as he announced emergency funding for food banks, groups serving vulnerable communities, and businesses that can't make rent.

"I know this is discouraging, especially going into Thanksgiving weekend. But remember this: when things were at their bleakest during the first wave, Canadians pulled together and flattened the curve."

As of Friday morning, there were 177,597 confirmed cases in Canada.

Ontario notched yet another daily record with 939 new cases, 336 of them in Toronto, 150 in Peel Region and 126 in Ottawa. But five new deaths and a worrying increase in hospitalizations to 225 from 192 patients intensified calls for tighter restrictions.

Cases also spiked in Quebec, where 1,102 more people have tested positive for COVID-19 in the past 24 hours and the death toll is now at 5,936.

Quebec reported 433 people in hospital, up eight patients from the day before, with 67 people in intensive care, one less than the day before.

Meanwhile, the number of deaths over the past week ending Oct. 8 reached 244, according to a Canadian Press tally of daily statistics from the Public Health Agency of Canada.

That is more than the total number of deaths in the previous five weeks combined, and the largest weekly death toll since June 18 reached 294 deaths. The highest single week tally of deaths was the first seven days of May, with 1,198 deaths.

Trudeau urged Canadians to do everything they could to slow the virus in coming weeks, acknowledging that Thanksgiving would have to be a curtailed affair.

"We are all committing together to do everything we can to slow the spread of the virus over the coming weeks, so that we can have a chance to get together in person at Christmas with our loved ones," Trudeau said in French.

Trudeau also touted job gains, noting 378,000 jobs were added in September when many Canadians were able to return to work as children returned to school.

The unemployment rate fell to 9 per cent Friday, but Statistics Canada noted it was still taking mothers longer to return to the workforce than men.

There were 1.8 million Canadians unemployed in September, with about 1.5 million of them looking for work.

StatCan says the unemployment rate would have been 11.9 per cent in September had it included in its calculation people who wanted a job, but didn't look for work.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. mayors seek meeting with provincial leaders

B.C. mayors seek meeting with provincial leaders
The BC Urban Mayors' Caucus has sent letters to NDP Leader John Horgan, B.C. Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson, the Green party's Sonia Furstenau and Conservative Leader Trevor Bolin.

B.C. mayors seek meeting with provincial leaders

Ex-PM John Turner eulogized at state funeral

Ex-PM John Turner eulogized at state funeral
The U.K.-born Turner, Canada's 17th prime minister, died peacefully at home on Sept. 19, his family said. He was 91.

Ex-PM John Turner eulogized at state funeral

Churchill Falls: Innu make $4-billion claim

Churchill Falls: Innu make $4-billion claim
Senior Innu leaders said Tuesday the provincially owned utility illegally took land from the Indigenous group without consultation in the late 1960s as construction started on the Churchill Falls hydroelectric project in central Labrador.

Churchill Falls: Innu make $4-billion claim

Feds approve first antigen rapid test

Feds approve first antigen rapid test
Canada has also signed a contract with Abbott that will see the company ship 20.5 million of the ruler-sized test devices to Canada.

Feds approve first antigen rapid test

Liberals face next confidence test this evening

Liberals face next confidence test this evening
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has said his party will support the speech after winning some key changes to legislation last week setting up new benefits for workers left jobless or underemployed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Liberals face next confidence test this evening

PBO: 'Superclusters' falling short of expectations

PBO: 'Superclusters' falling short of expectations
The private and academic partners in the endeavour were expected to spend over $1 billion over the same time.

PBO: 'Superclusters' falling short of expectations