Friday, April 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 restrictions back in one B.C. region

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jul, 2021 03:44 PM
  • COVID-19 restrictions back in one B.C. region

B.C. - Health officials have reinstated COVID-19 restrictions in part of British Columbia's Interior health region where an outbreak led to rapidly spreading infection driven primarily by unvaccinated residents between the ages of 20 and 40.

Dr. Sue Pollock, the chief medical health officer for Interior Health, says starting at midnight, masks must be worn in all indoor public places in central Okanagan communities including Peachland, West Kelowna, Kelowna, Lake Country and West Bank First Nations lands.

Pollock says masks are also recommended outdoors if people are unable to physically distance, but they will be optional for children under the age of 12 when they're attending summer camps or similar settings.

She says a number of businesses in the central Okanagan have been forced to close due to illness so enforcement will be increased as officials follow up with establishments where three or more cases of COVID-19 have occurred.

Pollock says non-essential travel to the area is being discouraged unless visitors are fully vaccinated, and residents should be planning events outdoors rather than inside whenever possible.

Nightclubs can remain open with up to 10 people seated at tables, but Pollock says dancing and socializing between tables is not be permitted.

Masks must also be worn at gyms, where enhanced cleaning and physical distancing are being reintroduced.

MORE National ARTICLES

Health agency wants five years to answer request

Health agency wants five years to answer request
The applicant recently asked the Public Health Agency of Canada for emails, texts and messages that president Iain Stewart had sent or received from June 14 to 21.

Health agency wants five years to answer request

Grits eye fall for moves on free tampons at work

Grits eye fall for moves on free tampons at work
The March briefing note to Filomena Tassi estimated the annual employer costs would likely be $1.17 million to provide free tampons and pads, based on an annual, per-employee cost of almost $60 and assuming a 50-per-cent take-up rate.

Grits eye fall for moves on free tampons at work

Heat wave, drought leave us vulnerable: farmers

Heat wave, drought leave us vulnerable: farmers
When an unprecedented heat wave "cooked" the cherries growing at his family's farm in Oliver, B.C., Pravin Dhaliwal tried to see past the financial loss to the passion that spurred him to follow in the footsteps of his father and grandfather.

Heat wave, drought leave us vulnerable: farmers

U.K. excludes Canadian travellers in eased rules

U.K. excludes Canadian travellers in eased rules
The U.K. announced today that fully vaccinated travellers in the U.S. or Europe will not have to quarantine on arrival to the U.K. The changes are set to go in place at 4 a.m. on August 2.

U.K. excludes Canadian travellers in eased rules

More out-of-province wildfire crews head to B.C.

More out-of-province wildfire crews head to B.C.
A crew of 34 specialists from Australia is set to bolster the 208 out-of-province personnel working alongside more than 3,000 firefighters and others on B.C.'s fire lines, he said.

More out-of-province wildfire crews head to B.C.

RCMP probe 'suspicious' wildfires in B.C. Interior

RCMP probe 'suspicious' wildfires in B.C. Interior
They say officers from Salmo responded with the local fire department to as many as four brush fires northwest of the intersection of Highways 6 and 3 on Saturday.

RCMP probe 'suspicious' wildfires in B.C. Interior