Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Downtown Calgary Daycare Closed After Child Tests Positive For COVID-19

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2020 12:51 AM

    CALGARY - A two-year-old who recently returned from a family vacation in Florida is among four new COVID-19 cases confirmed in Alberta, prompting a daycare in a downtown Calgary office tower to temporarily shut down.

     

    Suncor Energy spokeswoman Erin Rees says the Pump-Kin Patch Child Care Centre in the Suncor Energy Centre is closed until March 23. The children's families have been told to self-isolate until the end of March 20.

     

    Suncor doesn't operate the daycare but it's located in its office building. Rees said many employees have children that attend.

     

    "Suncor employees who have children in the Patch will not be coming into the office and we're working to facilitate them working from home where it's possible," she said.

     

    Rees added that the company is responding to the pandemic by cleaning more often, restricting business travel to high-risk areas and preparing for remote working.

     

    As of Thursday afternoon, Alberta had 23 confirmed cases. All are travel-related.

     

    Deena Hinshaw, Alberta's chief medical officer of health, said Thursday that the Calgary toddler developed mild symptoms after returning to Alberta and is expected to make a full recovery. The child was at the daycare last week while sick.

     

    "As a mother myself, I know that a child contracting COVID-19 may be upsetting for some people. Children are a vulnerable group and when they get sick, it can hit close to home," Hinshaw said.

     

    "I want to assure all parents that cases of COVID-19 in children are typically mild."

     

    However, she said measures for children are the same as any other case: "Isolate the person who is ill, find close contacts and ask them to stay home for 14 days while monitoring their symptoms."

     

    Hinshaw said parents and guardians should talk to their kids about the virus, even if it's daunting.

     

    "It is important to remember that children look to adults for guidance during new or stressful events. If you do not provide them with accurate information, they will still pick things up at school, on the playground, from television and online," she said.

     

    "It is important that all parents talk to their children in a factual, age-appropriate way. Let them know that worrying is a normal and healthy response. Be honest and accurate."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Strong Support For Expanding Access To Medically Assisted Dying: Poll

    Strong Support For Expanding Access To Medically Assisted Dying: Poll
    OTTAWA - A new poll suggests overwhelming support among Canadians for expanding access to medical assistance in dying.    

    Strong Support For Expanding Access To Medically Assisted Dying: Poll

    Premiers Bound For Washington To Celebrate USMCA, Beat Back Protectionism

    Premiers Bound For Washington To Celebrate USMCA, Beat Back Protectionism
    WASHINGTON - A delegation of premiers will be in Washington this weekend to buttress cross-border business ties with their American counterparts, hedging their bets at the dawn of a new and uncertain era of managed North American trade.    

    Premiers Bound For Washington To Celebrate USMCA, Beat Back Protectionism

    Man Accused Of Abducting Toddler In 1987 Returns To Canada To Face Charge

    Man Accused Of Abducting Toddler In 1987 Returns To Canada To Face Charge
    Allan Mann Jr. has been charged with abduction for allegedly kidnapping his son Jermaine in 1987, Toronto police said.    

    Man Accused Of Abducting Toddler In 1987 Returns To Canada To Face Charge

    Privacy Czar Asks Court To Declare Facebook Broke Law Governing Personal Info

    Privacy Czar Asks Court To Declare Facebook Broke Law Governing Personal Info
    OTTAWA - The federal privacy czar is asking a judge to declare that Facebook broke Canada's law governing how the private sector can use personal information.

    Privacy Czar Asks Court To Declare Facebook Broke Law Governing Personal Info

    Police Had No Right To Seize Hidden Bedside Camera From Airbnb Condo, Judge Says

    Police Had No Right To Seize Hidden Bedside Camera From Airbnb Condo, Judge Says
    TORONTO - A police officer had no right to enter a condo rented to an Airbnb guest who found a video camera hidden in a clock pointed at the bed, an Ontario judge has ruled.    

    Police Had No Right To Seize Hidden Bedside Camera From Airbnb Condo, Judge Says

    Top Ontario Health Official Says Coronavirus Surveillance Is Widening

    TORONTO - Monitoring for the novel coronavirus in Canada will now shift into a new phase, focusing on people returning from areas of China that haven't been quarantined, top provincial and federal medical officials said Thursday.    

    Top Ontario Health Official Says Coronavirus Surveillance Is Widening