Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 restrictions brought in for B.C. region

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Sep, 2021 03:19 PM
  • COVID-19 restrictions brought in for B.C. region

VICTORIA - British Columbia's provincial health officer has announced regional restrictions in an area that has seen a dramatic rise in COVID-19 cases among children as adult infections take off.

Dr. Bonnie Henry's order covers the eastern Fraser Valley in Hope, Chilliwack, Abbotsford, Mission and Agassiz-Harrison.

She says private gatherings will be limited to five additional people or one additional household and to 10 people outdoors, unless everyone is vaccinated.

Organized events like weddings or conferences will be limited to 10 people, or 50 people outside, unless everyone is fully vaccinated, which can be verified on the province's vaccine passport.

Henry says hospital capacity in the area is being tested as surgeries are cancelled.

She says the dramatic rise in COVID-19 cases among children in British Columbia reflects lower vaccination rates in some communities.

Premier John Horgan said earlier Tuesday that the "pandemic of the unvaccinated" is putting pressure on the health-care system.

"If you have a friend who’s not vaccinated, encourage them to do so. If you have a family member who’s waiting for more data, tell them to look at those who are pleading with their family members to get vaccinated from ICU beds, not just here in British Columbia, but indeed around the world.”

It comes as school trustees in Vancouver voted unanimously in favour of requiring masks to be worn by students in kindergarten to Grade 3.

Mask mandates set by the provincial health officer exempt youngsters in primary grades from wearing masks in class, although intermediate and secondary school students, staff and visitors must be masked in classrooms and indoor areas.

The Vancouver School Board is the first in the province to mandate masks for the younger students.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Cdns must be savvy in navigating COVID expertise

Cdns must be savvy in navigating COVID expertise
The recent government guidance on mixing and matching mRNA vaccines amid delivery delays is one of the latest issues to stir up public debate, including within the scientific community.

Cdns must be savvy in navigating COVID expertise

751 unmarked graves at residential school site

751 unmarked graves at residential school site
A Saskatchewan First Nation says it has found 751 unmarked graves at the site of a former residential school. The Cowessess First Nation says ground-penetrating radar recently discovered the graves at the Marieval Indian Residential School.

751 unmarked graves at residential school site

Iran's 'reckless acts' caused Flight 752 crash

Iran's 'reckless acts' caused Flight 752 crash
The summary of a forensic report from the Canadian government says a "series of reckless acts and omissions" by Iranian authorities resulted in the fatal downing of a passenger jet in January 2020.

Iran's 'reckless acts' caused Flight 752 crash

Hussen: Flexibility on costs for housing projects

Hussen: Flexibility on costs for housing projects
The federal minister in charge of boosting the stock of affordable housing says the government can loosen its usually strict rules to help groups manage rising costs for construction materials.

Hussen: Flexibility on costs for housing projects

Heat 'dome' to bring sizzling temperatures to B.C.

Heat 'dome' to bring sizzling temperatures to B.C.
The weather office says an exceptionally strong ridge of high pressure will stall over the province raising temperatures in parts of the Fraser Valley, Fraser Canyon and southern Interior to 40 C, or higher, by Sunday or Monday.

Heat 'dome' to bring sizzling temperatures to B.C.

Heatwave danger: Burnaby RCMP urging caution after toddler falls from second-storey window

Heatwave danger: Burnaby RCMP urging caution after toddler falls from second-storey window
Burnaby RCMP is urging families to secure the windows in their homes this summer after a toddler fell from an apartment window on Sunday night. Police were called to Arcola Street near Sperling Avenue around 9:30 p.m. after witnesses saw the child fall from a window on the second floor.

Heatwave danger: Burnaby RCMP urging caution after toddler falls from second-storey window