Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Military to provide help to Ontario

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Apr, 2021 06:55 PM
  • Military to provide help to Ontario

The federal government will announce this afternoon the provision of military medical personnel to help Ontario's beleaguered health-care system with a third wave of COVID-19.

A senior government official, granted anonymity to discuss matters not yet public, confirmed to The Canadian Press the military will help the struggling province.

The plan involves providing teams of nurses and medical technicians to hospitals and other facilities struggling to keep up with a spike of new infections.

Such teams were deployed into long-term care facilities in Ontario and Quebec last spring as the first wave of COVID-19 swept across the country.

Military aircraft are also being made available to fly medical professionals from other provinces to Ontario to help with the pandemic.

Today's move follows a formal request for military and Canadian Red Cross assistance by the province.

Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic Leblanc first announced last week that the military would fly medical personnel from other provinces and territories to Ontario, and that Ottawa would cover the transportation costs.

MORE National ARTICLES

550 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday

550 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday
There have been 182 new confirmed COVID-19 cases that are variants of concern in our province, for a total of 576 cases.

550 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday

Province keeps B.C. moving: funding inter-city bus service, regional airports

Province keeps B.C. moving: funding inter-city bus service, regional airports
The Province is providing one-time funding of up to $10.7 million for inter-city bus operators and up to $16.5 million for regional airports to support operations between April 1, 2021, and March 31, 2022. 

Province keeps B.C. moving: funding inter-city bus service, regional airports

Dix blames Telus for B.C. call centre failure

Dix blames Telus for B.C. call centre failure
Telus president Darren Entwistle says in a statement he is "incredibly sorry" for the frustrations that residents have experienced trying to connect to the call centres and the company can and will do better.

Dix blames Telus for B.C. call centre failure

Final Keystone XL bill about $1.3B: minister

Final Keystone XL bill about $1.3B: minister
KXL was to take more Alberta oil across the United States and down to ports and refineries on the Gulf Coast in Texas.

Final Keystone XL bill about $1.3B: minister

Zebra mussels found in B.C. aquariums

Zebra mussels found in B.C. aquariums
Zebra mussels pose a major threat to B.C. waterways and their rapid expansion crowds out other wildlife and damages ecosystems, pipes and infrastructure.

Zebra mussels found in B.C. aquariums

Safety board report examines B.C. helicopter crash

Safety board report examines B.C. helicopter crash
The report finds the pilot was well rested, highly trained and had more than 200 hours of flight time on the Airbus Helicopters AS 350 B2 when it went down.

Safety board report examines B.C. helicopter crash