Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

Feds speeding up vaccine rollout with 20M doses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2021 06:05 PM
  • Feds speeding up vaccine rollout with 20M doses

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada has secured an extra 20 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine against the virus that causes COVID-19, saying a faster rollout is the key to returning to some version of normality.

He says that means Canada will receive 80 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines this year, and that he remains confident the federal government will meet its goal of providing shots to everyone who wants them by September.

The news comes as Ontario is set to invoke new measures Tuesday to try to get control over the surging COVID-19 pandemic, where new data indicates Ontario’s health system will be overwhelmed and deaths from COVID-19 will exceed those in the first wave unless there is a significant reduction in contacts between residents.

The province is considering further reducing in-person gathering limits, cutting the opening hours for essential stores like groceries and pharmacies and restricting construction and manufacturing to essential business only.

While the province reported the fewest new daily cases in more than a week at 2,903, it is also reporting 41 new deaths and 138 new admissions to hospital.

There are now nearly 400 people with COVID-19 in intensive care in Ontario, almost twice the number who needed critical care at the beginning of December.

The new modelling projects that under Ontario's current COVID-19 restrictions, daily deaths from the disease will double from 50 to 100 by the end of February.

Projections show there will be about 500 COVID-19 patients in intensive care by January and potentially more than 1,000 by February in more severe scenarios.

Experts compiling projections for the government say the growth of COVID-19 is accelerating in Ontario, growing at seven per cent on the "worst days."

Health Minister Christine Elliott says the province has also detected eight more cases of the COVID-19 variant from United Kingdom, bringing the total number detected across Canada now to at least 22.

Meanwhile, Trudeau also announced the Canada-U.S. land border will remain closed to non-essential travel until at least Feb. 21 — another 30-day extension to the restrictions in place since mid-March.

MORE National ARTICLES

Acquittal Quashed: Homeowner Who Gunned Down Car Thief To Be Tried Anew

TORONTO - A homeowner who gunned down a would-be car thief seconds after a driveway confrontation will again have to stand trial on second-degree murder, Ontario's top court ruled on Wednesday.

Acquittal Quashed: Homeowner Who Gunned Down Car Thief To Be Tried Anew

Prepare For New Coronavirus Like An Emergency, Health Minister Advises

OTTAWA - Health Minister Patty Hajdu is encouraging Canadians to stockpile food and medication in their homes in case they or a loved one falls ill with the novel coronavirus.    

Prepare For New Coronavirus Like An Emergency, Health Minister Advises

Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran
TORONTO - A woman in her 60s who recently travelled to Iran has become the fifth person to contract the novel coronavirus in Ontario, as the province's monitoring of the virus widens.

Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions

Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions
Bill C-7, introduced Monday, would remove a provision in the four-year-old assisted dying law that restricted the procedure to those whose natural death is "reasonably foreseeable" — a restriction that was struck down as unconstitutional by a Quebec court last fall.

Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions

Trudeau Uses Speech To Pitch African Envoys For UN Security Council Seat

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has taken Canada's campaign for a seat on the United Nations Security Council directly to African diplomats with a speech that tried to emphasize his boyhood connection to the continent.    

Trudeau Uses Speech To Pitch African Envoys For UN Security Council Seat

Peter Nygard Steps Down From Company Following Sex Assault Claims

NEW YORK - Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard is stepping down as chairman of his company following an FBI raid on his Manhattan headquarters over sex assault allegations.    

Peter Nygard Steps Down From Company Following Sex Assault Claims