Sunday, December 21, 2025
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

243 COVID19 cases for Friday

243 COVID19 cases for Friday
Data from the B.C. Centre for Disease Control show that's the highest daily case count since late May. More than half of the latest cases as well as overall active infections are in the Interior Health region, where an outbreak was declared in the central Okanagan.

243 COVID19 cases for Friday

Two travellers fined $20K each for fake vax docs

Two travellers fined $20K each for fake vax docs
The Public Health Agency of Canada says the travellers also didn't comply with requirements to stay at a government-authorized hotel or to get tested upon arrival.

Two travellers fined $20K each for fake vax docs

Feds run $24B deficit over April and May

Feds run $24B deficit over April and May
The Finance Department's regular fiscal monitor says the budgetary deficit over April and May was $23.8 billion, down from the $86.8 billion recorded over the same months in 2020.    

Feds run $24B deficit over April and May

Feds extend business, worker aid to end of October

Feds extend business, worker aid to end of October
The decision means that wage and rent subsidies for businesses, and income support for workers out of a job or who need to take time off to care for family or stay home sick, will last until Oct. 23.

Feds extend business, worker aid to end of October

Federal data warns of risk of fourth COVID wave

Federal data warns of risk of fourth COVID wave
Canada's chief public health officer says long-term forecasts indicate that a hasty approach to reopening could portend a sharp resurgence of the virus by the end of the summer.

Federal data warns of risk of fourth COVID wave

Top doctors weigh in on Alberta's COVID plan

Top doctors weigh in on Alberta's COVID plan
Chief public health officer Theresa Tam is urging people to continue isolating, get tested for COVID-19 and inform their close contacts even if it is no longer mandated.

Top doctors weigh in on Alberta's COVID plan