11:38 a.m.: Ontario directors say some categories will want to combine
11:11 a.m.: Ontario reports 112 new cases, one death
4:15 a.m.: Hong Kong tests thousands of people for coronavirus
The latest news about coronavirus from Canada and around the world on Tuesday.This record will be up to date on the day. Web links to larger stories if available.
3 p.m.: The Manitoba government is expanding its regulations on masks on school buses as students prepare to return to elegance next week.
The government says all students, drivers and other bus passengers should wear masks.
The province planned to require the use of masks on school buses only for the fourth grade onwards.
Health report 18 new instances of COVID-19, for a total of 1232.
Two of the new instances are citizens of a long-term care segment of the Brandon Regional Health Center, where the resident and two staff members had already tested positive.
With more people recovering, the number of active instances in Manitoba decreased to 459.
Health officials also warn of two possible public displays in Brandon: at an East Side Mario eating spot on August 23 and at Warlock Tattoo for several days last August.
2:20 p.m.: Sherway Gardens Mall in Etobicoke says COVID-19 has been shown at Keg Steakhouse and Joey restaurants.
A spokesman for Joey Restaurants said a worker with the virus last worked there on August 24.
Since then, the place to eat has reopened, the mall said, while the barrel will reopen at 3 p.m.Tuesday.
Cadillac Fairview “will continue with our additional cleaning of all elevator benches, food tables, non-unusual seating, stair doors and ramps, and all other major tactile issues in the community,” a mall spokesman said in a statement.
“At this stage, public suitability has indicated that no further action is required and that construction can begin operations.”
The mall did not disclose the number of other people living with the virus in Keg or the main points of the closure of the two restaurants. Keg may not be contacted for comment.
2:15 p.m.: McMaster University says a graduate student on campus examined COVID-19.
On its online page on Monday, the university said that all the spaces where the student had spent time had already been “carefully cleaned” and reopened.
McMaster doesn’t say when and where the student on campus or when he tested positive.
2 p.m.: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announced Tuesday that he will lift a state ban on nursing homes that has separated seniors from their families since mid-March for fear of spreading the new coronavirus.
DeSantis said he would approve the ban in a decree later tuesday, following the recommendations of an executive organization on nursing homes that has met in recent weeks.
The working group recommends that houses allow members of the family circle to stop at those who enjoy no more than two at a time and wear protective equipment, adding masks. Institutions spend 14 days without a new CASE of COVID-19 among staff or citizens to allow stopovers.
More than a portion of Florida establishments: 62% have had a case since Aug. 11, said Mary Mayhew, director of the state fitness care management agency, which led the task force.
1:30 p.m.: Ten thousand unionized family daycare circles in Quebec began the first of a series of rotating movements on Tuesday after the failure of negotiations with the province.
The organization representing workers, the Federation of Early Childhood Workers, said rotary movements have begun in Quebec City and will end on September 18 in the Laurentian and Montérégie regions, north and south of Montreal.
Montreal nursery is expected to go on strike on September 11.The union says it plans to launch a general strike on September 21 if an agreement is not reached before that date.He estimates that about 60,000 families will be affected by the pressure.
Representatives of the Quebec government and met Monday afternoon and said the talks would continue on an unspecified date later this week.
The union represents others who make day care staff stay out of their homes.They are on higher salaries, among other lawsuits.
Nursery educators are not paid by the hour.Instead, they get a government grant to provide domestic services.His union estimates that, based on hours worked and expenses, staff bring home the $12.42 per hour.Workers aren’t easy at $16.75 an hour, with an hour.
12:45 p.m.: Canada’s most sensible public health officials say that widespread immunization of Canadians is the only way to block COVID-19 and allow life to return to its pre-pandemic state.
Dr. Theresa Tam and her assistant, Dr. Howard Njoo, propose the assessment a day after the Trudeau government announced the latest installment of its plan to pre-purchase tens of millions of doses of vaccines, signing agreements with two U.S. companies.
Tam and Njoo say it’s time for Canadians to roll up their arms and get drunk.
Njoo says the percentage of Canadians who want to vaccinate for broad immunity is unclear, but he says it’s vital that as many other people are vaccinated as you can imagine.
Njoo says a vaccine may be obtained someday in 2021, most likely as early as the spring.
“The widespread use of the vaccine is the most productive possibility for Canadians of some of what we have lost,” Tam said.
12:30 p.m.: Under the chimney of progressive conservatives’ plans to bring young people back to the country in two weeks, Prime Minister Doug Ford quietly visited a School in Toronto.
Ford visited Kensington Community School in the city centre to review the current measures as academics resume the ranks for the first time since the school closed on 13 March when the COVID-19 pandemic intensified.
While the tour was left out of the Prime Minister’s official itinerary and is not open to all media, it was accompanied by pool chambers from CityNews and Canadian Press.
11:38 a.m.: The director of the Ontario Trustees Association says school forums will not yet have a selection to consolidate and destroy some study rooms when they start school this fall.
Cathy Abraham, president of the Ontario Public Schools Board Association, says decisions will vary from board to board and can be made from school to school.
She says the combined categories will take up position despite the number of young people in schools, as some parents will leave their children at home for online learning due to COVID-19.
Abraham says school forums will have to adhere to investment agreements with the Ontario government, meaning that sizes of elegance will remain the same despite the retirement of the students.
This would possibly mean that categories collapse, or separate categories are created, to succeed in the appropriate government-approved degrees in schools.
Prime Minister Doug Ford said Monday that he was unaware of the fall in table prices, but claimed it could happen.
11:35 a.m.: Quebec reports 122 new cases of COVID-19 and two more deaths attributed to the new coronavirus.
The health government said the deaths occurred between August 25 and 30.
Quebec has now reported a total of 62,617 cases of COVID-19 and 5,762 related deaths since the onset of the pandemic.
Hospitalizations decreased from two to 110, but the number of other people in resuscitation increased from two to 20.
Prime Minister Francois Legault warned Quebecers on Monday to be vigilant about recent COVID-19 infections, saying it did not need to close newly reopened schools.
The province made 10510 COVID-19 s on August 30, the last day of which it is known.
11:20 a.m.: Positive COVID-19 tests at two calgary-area schools derailed the beginning of the year for some, while in northern Alberta, an entire school department decided to delay the return to school.
Meadows Ridge School in Okotoks, south of Calgary, did not open as planned today after a staff member was diagnosed with COVID-19.
In a note to parents sent Monday night, the school says it is working hard with public fitness officials and will notify anyone who has had close contact with the staff member.
Calgary’s Canyon Meadows School was scheduled to open as planned today, but the principal, deputy principal, and administrative clerk were forced to turn 40 to 14 days after someone at the school tested positive for the new coronavirus.
Meanwhile, the Peace River School Division, northwest of Edmonton, posted a notice on its online page saying it delays the start of its school year until the end of Labor Day.
Alberta Maximus students are returning to elegance this week, however, COVID-19 prevention measures have made it a tricky start to the school year.
On Monday, Alberta’s most sensible doctor apologized for the anxiety and confusion caused by a public physical fitness order back to school this weekend.
The order issued on Saturday stipulates that schools do not have to provide a two-meter space when students or visitors are sitting at a table or table.
The president of the Alberta Teachers Association called it a surprising reversal of physical estrangement regulations in the classroom.
11:11 a.m.(update): Ontario reports 112 new cases of COVID-19 and a new coronavirus-related death.
There were 92 instances recently marked as resolved in today’s report.
The total number is now 42,421, of which 2,812 deaths and 38,369 are marked as resolved.
Health Minister Christine Elliott said 27 of the province’s 34 public fitness teams reported or fewer new cases.
She says 18 sets of exercises are reporting new cases today.
The province was able to perform 23,545 tests the day before.
11:00 a.m.: Public visits to the White House, suspended just six months ago due to the coronavirus outbreak, are expected to resume later this month with new fitness and protection policies.
Visits will resume on September 12, two days a week of five, and only a few hours a day, the first lady’s workplace announced Tuesday.The number of visitors will also be limited.
“For the protection and suitability of all visitors, new policies have been implemented that align with the rules issued through federal, state and local authorities,” the White House said.
All customers over 2 years of age must wear a mask and practice social distance.
10:18 a.m. Array: Ontario reports 112 new cases of COVID-19, as the province processed more than 23,500 tests, tweeted Health Minister Christine Elliott.Locally, 27 of Ontario’s 34 public fitness teams report five or fewer cases, and 18 of them report any new cases.(more main points to come)
10 a.m.: Mayor Patrick Brown says he is at the point of compliance with Brampton’s Mandatory Mask Regulations after the city’s latest COVID-19 rape statistics.
City police imposed 15 fines for mask violations in the week leading up to August 26.
“We only won 84 court cases for COVID-19 last week,” Brown told reporters in the city’s latest weekly COVID-19 update.”Overall, compliance is broad. I just need to say how encouraging it is when I move on to a traffic prevention (or) anywhere inside.”
“We are seeing wide compliance in our city, which shows that everyone takes fitness recommendations seriously and that’s why we’re making so much progress in eliminating COVID-19,” he added.
9:45 a.m.: Two workers at a busy Mississauga gym tested positive for COVID-19, according to Tracy Matthews, vice president of operations at GoodLife Fitness.
Matthews said the downtown Club of Mississauga Heartland reported on Friday the initial tests of the worker, who has not visited the facility since Wednesday, August 26.
The worker is quarantined at home and all members have been informed, Matthews confirmed.
Three days later, on Monday, GoodLife learned that a worker had tested positive at one point and has not been since Saturday.
The worker is also quarantined and members and workers have been re-informed of the case.
Matthews showed that none of the workers “had close and extended contact with other people at the club,” in an email.
9:21 a.m.: General Motors says it has finished manufacturing 30,000 respiratory medical devices for the US government to have completed.But it’s not the first time Treat patients with coronavirus.
The Department of Health and Human Services has collaborated with GM to create enthusiasts at a switched automotive electronics plant in Kokomo, Indiana, with a charge of $489.4 million (US).U.S.A.).
The machines were designed through Ventec Life Systems in the Seattle area, and GM increased production by about a month when it became known that the United States and other countries would run out of fans.Fans were supposed to be finished by Monday.
GM said Tuesday that it has ceded Kokomo’s operation to Ventec, which will continue to make enthusiasts there and in Bothell, Washington.
8:41 a.m. Shooting at their mask or running to embrace long-time invisible friends, millions of young people returned to school across Europe and beyond on Tuesday in a massive experiment aimed at reducing inequality and reviving economies, despite the ongoing pandemic.
The risk of the virus lurked in the shadows as young people said goodbye to their parents with a kiss in France, timidly greeted their teachers in Israel, moved to spaced offices in England, and raised their hands in Russia.
Though acknowledging “a little scared,” Jérôme Continent still brought his freshman Baptiste to school on Tuesday in the Parisian suburb of Roissy-en-Brie, where the buzz of excitement from the first day was even more intense than the usual after the reversal of the coronavirus. last school year.
“I know we’re paying attention,” he said. Children have to live.”
France reports thousands of new infections every day, more than any of its neighbours, all French schoolchildren over the age of 11 will have to wear a mask all day, adding recreation and music lessons.Similar regulations exist in Balkan countries, while other countries are more lax with masks.Some study rooms are radically different from previous years, with plastic shields around desks and virus warning symptoms everywhere.
While many U.S. school districts have been in the world to have a problem. But it’s not the first time They only have their online courses and others have brought a combination of online and face-to-face learning, in-person courses are the norm as Europe returns to school.Governments seek to show that life continues in spite of a virus that has inflamed at least 25 million people internationally and killed more than 800,000.
8:30 am: Several others suffer from loneliness, anxiety and depression as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, and even more from others with monetary difficulties, minorities and young adults, according to experts in intellectual aptitude at Johns Hopkins University..
Experts highlighted their findings at a press convention on Thursday to take advantage of the demanding intellectual aptitude situations created through the pandemic.
Their findings are supported by national surveys and other recent research, but may seem obvious to the public as many others revel in first-hand symptoms, some for the first time.
“The pandemic is having an effect on our lives in many tactics: social, monetary and health,” Elizabeth A said.Stuart, professor of Mental Health, Biostatistics and Health Policy and Health Management at the Bloomberg School of Public Health.at Hopkins.
“The scope of COVID-19 has been unprecedented and the monetary effects outweigh the other herbal errors we have studied,” he said.”The long-term consequences remain to be seen.”
8:11 a.m.: The election of the Eskasoni First Nation Band Council was postponed until spring 2021, in the hope that a new leadership team will be formed until April.
The election scheduled for this fall was still postponed because Chief Leroy Denny says a wave of COVID-19 is coming.
“Today, Nova Scotia is running the pandemic, but with the start of schools and flu season just around the corner, we can’t be sure what’s going to happen,” Denny said in a statement.
He said his team was still guilty of ensuring the fitness and protection of the Micmac network and that a choice in this era could be complicated.
If a wave happens for the time being, schools can close smoothly, Denny said, but postponing an election cycle that takes forty-five days would leave the net in a delicate position without a leader with a mandate to protect his interests.
Denny also claimed that the normal election official in poor health is leaving and that the Office of Emergency Management is already guilty of securing network protection and that elections would only rise to their stress, but elections are expected in the spring.
7:35 a.m.: When Kevin Lee heard rumors that the NHL would bring his playoff bubble to Toronto and that some would stay at Hotel X, he sighed relieved.
The deputy director of the 32-year-old dining room assumed that meant he would repaint at the hotel on the CNE grounds with his company, By Peter.
“I started hearing from some other friends in the industry that the NHL was coming to Hotel X.I was excited. I think it’s a smart score,” Lee said.
Instead, with more than two hundred colleagues, Lee is now in favor of the paintings after Hotel X ended Peter’s lease.
Read the full story of Josh Rubin’s star
7:30 a.m.: Sports halls, hairdressers and internet cafes were able to partially reopen Tuesday in the Philippine capital when the government eased quarantine restrictions despite the country with the maximum coronavirus infections in Southeast Asia.
President Rodrigo Duterte, however, placed the southern city of Iligan under a slight blockade after an increase in network infections, underlining how COVID-19 cases have spread from Manila City, the epicenter of the epidemic in the country.
Night curfews have been shortened in the highest municipalities of the Capital Region and outlying provinces the new provisions, which will last one month.
Duterte also said that medical staff would obtain food and shelter in bulk if they were evicted in a different way through homeowners and college residences who fear they will bring the virus.If homeowners are in poor health, “don’t leave them in hospitals too, maybe.”It’s better, eye for an eye, ” said the president harshly, though he later added that he was joking.
More than 220,000 cases of COVID-19, some 3,500 deaths, have been reported in the Philippines, which have struggled to balance public restrictions with economic concerns.
7:20 a.m.: Currently, Dennis Franklin Cromarty High School hallways in Thunder Bay are filled with the excitement and nerves of concerned academics starting a new school year.However, by 2020, the First Nations school will be largely empty as it starts its program later and online.
Unable to make an investment safe enough to address the risks of a pandemic, Dennis Franklin Cromarty (DFC), a 24 First Nations academic school in Northern Ontario, will offer virtual learning for the first seven weeks.will remain in their communities rather than moving to Thunder Bay, as teachers teach the program in virtual classrooms.
“The degrees of stress are high, the anxiety levels are high, just because we don’t know, we don’t know what the characteristics are, what the answers are,” Professor Aaron Guthrie said.”We prepare to prepare from various other angles, take a look at the exit to do our best.”
7:17 a.m.: What’s in your fridge? According to a new announcement that Canadians have been throwing more food since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, there’s a smart chance you’ll eat more.
A survey conducted through the Caddle company for Dalhousie University’s agri-food research lab found that Canadian families can throw an average of 13.5% more food than before the pandemic, i.e. 2.3 kilograms or just over five pounds of food a week.
The overbought will produce 20 to 24 million kilograms of additional biological waste according to the month, according to the study, which surveyed 8,272 Canadians between August 21 and August 23, with an annual charge of approximately $2,000 consistent with the household.
Read the full story of rose star Saba
7:14 A Zimbabwean journalist jailed for more than a month is “seriously ill” and has symptoms “consistent with COVID-19,” said one of his lawyers, but the government says the journalist “is fine.”
Journalist Hopewell Chin’ono seemed “visibly ill,” according to Doug Coltart, a lawyer who visited the reporter on Monday.
A doctor who then evaluated the scribe noticed that Chin’ono suffered from “headaches, fever and distorted taste.”It’s consistent with COVID-19, ” said Coltart.
“Tests have been carried out and we are waiting for the results. COVID-19 fears are genuine because other people have tested the virus positive in prison.It’s overcrowded and non-public protective devices aren’t enough,” Coltart said.Tuesday.
Chin’ono has been detained for more than a month after being arrested along with opposition politician Jacob Ngarivhume and accused of inciting violence for posting his on social media for an anti-government demonstration.The demonstration was foiled through the army and police on 31 July.
5 a.m. Array: Ten thousand Quebec nurseries are launching a rotating strike today, negotiations between their union and the province have resulted in an agreement.
The organization representing workers, the Federation of Early Childhood Workers, says the strike will begin in Quebec City and the Chaudiére-Appalachian regions and end on September 18 in the Laurentian and Montérégie regions, north and south of Montreal.
Representatives of the Quebec and Quebec government met Monday afternoon and said the talks would continue on an unspecified date later this week.
Family day care in Quebec needs higher wages, among other lawsuits.
Quebec Family Minister Mathieu Lacombe said last week that he hoped to succeed in an agreement for a strike.
The Workers’ Federation has announced its goal of launching a strike on 21 September if no agreement is reached before that date.
4:45 a.m.: The number of coronavirus shows across Russia exceeded one million on Tuesday, and the government reported 4,729 new
With a total of 1,000,048 cases reported, Russia has the fourth number of cases in the world after the United States, Brazil and India.More than 815,000 other people have recovered so far, according to authorities, and more than 17,000 have died.
Experts say that the true number of victims of the pandemic is much higher than all reported figures, due to limited evidence, minor cases omitted and cover-up of cases through some governments, among other factors.
On Tuesday, Russia lifted the maximum blocking restrictions on maximum parts of the country.
4:15 a.m .: Hong Kong screened thousands of people for coronavirus on Tuesday at the start of a massive testing effort that has some other political flash point in China’s semi-autonomous territory.
Volunteers were queuing in some of the more than one hundred detection centers, many citizens distrust resources and staff provided through China’s central government, and some have expressed fears that DNA collection would be collected.
The Hong Kong government rejected these considerations and leader Carrie Lam suggested that the public watch the program fairly and objectively, and called on critics to avoid discouraging others from being tested, as participation was for the program’s good fortune.
Lam said at his weekly press convention that more than 10,000 people, most of them Hong Kong government ministers, had been screened Tuesday morning.
“This large-scale universal network detection program is battling the epidemic and reaping benefits for our society.It will also help Hong Kong emerge unscathed from the pandemic and announce the resumption of daily activities,” Lam said.
More than 500,000 people in the city of 7.5 million people have signed up to the program, which will last at least a week and aims to identify the silent carriers of the virus, those who have no symptoms, that can simply spread the virus.Disease.
4 a.m.: The most recent coVID-19 demonstration numbers in Canada at 4 p.m. EDT on September 1, 2020:
Shown 128,948 in Canada.
Quebec: 62492 shown (including 5760 deaths, 55353 resolved)
Ontario: 42309 were shown (including 2811 deaths, 38277 resolved)
Alberta: 13902 shown (including 239 deaths, 12293 resolved)
British Columbia: 5,790 shown (including 208 deaths, 4,406 resolved)
Saskatchewan: 1619 shown (including 24 deaths, 1561 resolved)
Manitoba: 1214 shown (including 14 deaths, 731 resolved)
Nova Scotia: 1085 shown (including deaths, 1013 resolved)
Newfoundland and Labrador: 269 shown (including 3 deaths, 265 resolved)
New Brunswick: 191 shown (including 2 deaths, 185 resolved)
Prince Edward Island: shown (41 resolved)
Yukon: 15 shown (15 resolved)
_ Repatriated Canadians: thirteen shown (including thirteen resolved)
Northwest Territories: five shown (five of which are resolved)
Nunavut: no cases were shown
Total: 128948 (0 presumption, 128948 showed 9126 deaths, 114158 resolved)
Monday: There will be a resurgence of COVID-19 in the fall, Health and Municipal officials warned in Toronto on Monday, adding that there is a wave larger than the one that peaked in April.
“We know that most of us are immune to COVID-19 and that the virus still circulates a lot,” she said.Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s medical officer, at a press convention at City Hall.
“We are in favour of a resurgence in the coming weeks and months.”
Read more here: Toronto provides a plan for the expected resurgence of COVID-19
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News of coronavirus is ongoing on Monday.