Today’s coronavirus news: U.S. nears 5 million COVID-19 cases; Ontario reports fewer than 100 cases for second day in a row

10:10 a.m. In the past two days, Ontario’s public fitness sets have reported fewer than one hundred instances of COVID1-9, adding 88 on Monday and 91 today.

9:46 a.m. Windsor-Essex Region in Stage 2 as it continues to fight new coVID-19 instances

6:56 a.m., China and the World Health Organization talk about plans to hint at the origin of the coronavirus outbreak

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 longer stories if available.

1:07 p.m. Prince Edward Island’s Director of Public Health says his province will not take a final resolution on the adoption of the federal government’s COVID-19 touch search application until it is known in Ontario, where it has already been launched.

Dr. Heather Morrison says the app’s use by the Ontario health system provides an opportunity for other provinces to evaluate it before adopting it.

Morrison says P.E.I. will be part of a federal advisory group that will ensure the app safeguards the confidentiality and privacy of its users.

She says the app will provide a layer of coverage opposite the virus, but it will not update fitness measures such as physical distance, hand washing and the desire to wear a mask in indoor public spaces.

Users of the loose app, for Android and iPhone, can be notified if their phone has recently been near a user’s phone who then volunteered to test positive for COVID-19.

There are no active instances of COVID-19 on the island and Morrison says the 36 instances shown since the start of the pandemic were cured.

12:44 p.m. Parties and weddings in giant houses, summer camps, concerts, bars and crowded restaurants, buying maskless malls: Americans’ resistance to life restrictions is seen as a key explanation of why the United States has accumulated more deaths and coronavirus infections. Than any other country.

The nation has recorded more than 155,000 dead in a little more than six months and is fast approaching an almost off-the-charts 5 million COVID-19 infections.

Some Americans have resisted wearing masks and social distancing, calling such precautions an over-the-top response or an infringement on their liberty. Public health experts say such behaviour has been compounded by confusing and inconsistent guidance from politicians and a patchwork quilt of approaches to containing the scourge by county, state and federal governments.

“The thing that’s maddening is country after country and state after state have shown us how we can contain the virus,” said Dr. Jonathan Quick, who is leading a pandemic initiative for the Rockefeller Foundation. “It’s not like we don’t know what works. We do.”

The number of infections shown in the United States exceeded 4.7 million, with new instances exceeding 60,000 consistent with the day. While this number has dropped from a peak of more than 70,000 at the time of July, the instances are in 26 states, many in the south and west, and deaths are spreading in 35 states.

On average, the number of day-consistent deaths in the U.S. Over the past two weeks it has increased from approximately 780 to 1,056, according to research conducted by The Associated Press.

12:28 p.m. Florida won another reminder Tuesday of how the coronavirus pandemic was so fatal: another 247 deaths were reported.

This means that the state had another 7,526 people who died from COVID-19 headaches. The last diary generally does not reflect deaths in the last 24 hours, however, in recent weeks, and may also be caused by the disruptions of Tropical Storm Isaias.

However, this is the third highest number of deaths reported in the State Department of Health’s daily pandemic report. Last week, the highest number of deaths on Friday 257.

New COVID-19 cases also increased Tuesday, with 5,446 new diagnoses, a day after the state reported the fewest infections since June 23. That’s an increase of 694 from Monday’s tally.

Still, the drop in cases follows the closure of many state COVID-19 testing sites due to the storm. The test results reported on a single day typically reflect tests taken over several days.

12 p.m. Ontario reported 91 cases of COVID-19, bringing the total to 419 new infections across the province over the long weekend.

The 91 instances included nine in Windsor-Esex, which has the number of active infections in Ontario in 262, well above Toronto much larger than 184 and moved to level 3 last Friday, allowing bars and restaurants to serve consumers indoors and theaters. Gyms and playgrounds to reopen.

Read Rob Ferguson’s full story of the Star: Ontario reports more than new coVID-19 instances over a long weekend

11:50 a.m. Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers recently issued a statewide masking requirement to stop the spread of coronavirus.

It took effect on Saturday. Nearly a quarter of Wisconsin’s 55,328 instances had been shown in the last 14 days, according to knowledge collected through Johns Hopkins University.

Much of the spike has occurred in counties in the state’s densely urban southeastern corner. But the disease has spread with amazing speed in northern Wisconsin’s sparsely populated rural counties.

Evers, a Democrat, had issued a stay-at-home order shortly after the pandemic took hold in the state in March. The conservative-leaning state Supreme Court struck it down in May amid pressure from restaurants and taverns.

Republican lawmakers are talking about convening a special consultation to cancel the existing mandate.

11:50 a.m. The German government is raising its caution against some popular destinations in Turkey after discovering that the degrees of coronavirus there are low.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer said caution would be lifted for Antalya, Izmir, Aydin and Mugla, where the coronavirus has subsided.

Demmer says Turkey has developed a plan to do some tourism in the regions. People returning from Turkey to Germany will have to check for negative coronavirus within 48 hours of departure.

Germany is home to a sizable Turkish minority and Germans are among frequent visitors to Turkey.

11:50 a.m. The Afghan government reopens universities after minimizing coronavirus tests.

The spokesman for Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, Sediq Sediqqi, says the administration is emphasizing preventive measures at universities. Other schools will remain closed for now.

The country’s Health Ministry says despite the recent reduction in new cases, many people didn’t adhere to protocols for preventing the spread during the recent Eid ul-Adha holiday. That means there may be a virus spike in the next few weeks.

In the last 24 hours, the Afghan government has recorded 36 cases shown and no deaths. However, foreign organizations say that up to 80% of the population has been analysed.

11:29 a.m. The Alberta government says it will make the mask mandatory for up to a maximum of students and when schools reopen in September.

Education Minister Adriana LaGrange said fourth through 12th graders and all should wear a mask in non-unusual areas, corridors and buses.

Children won’t have to wear a mask when they feel elegant at a certain distance from others.

She says the province will provide two reusable masks for students and staff members, and workers will also get an optional face protector.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, medical director of health at Alberta, says she has reviewed COVID-19 studies and believes the mask is restricting the spread of the disease in schools.

She says the use of the mask is for the reopening needs of the schools advertised in Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia.

11:27 a.m. While Quebec this week allows meetings of up to 250 others in and out, a Mohawk network south of Montreal is not doing the same.

Kahnawake officials said they would stick to a 50-person restriction for demonstrations and said plans to open bars and gambling institutions next Monday were postponed indefinitely.

In a statement, the firm overseeing Kahnawake’s pandemic reaction said the resolution comes amid statistical trends suggesting there will be a weekly increase in new infections in the province.

Quebec reported 123 new cases of COVID-19, as well as two more deaths.

The Department of Health reported 3 fewer hospitalizations for 169, however, 3 patients are in resuscitation, for a total of 21.

The province most affected by the pandemic in Canada, it recorded 59,845 cases and 5,685 deaths.

10:55 a.m. Indian health authorities say phase 2 clinical trials for coronavirus vaccines developed by Indian companies have started.

It is an inactivated virus vaccine developed through Bharat Biotech and a candidate DNA vaccine developed through Zydus Cadila. Phase 2 trials for the candidate vaccine developed through the University of Oxford will begin at 17 sites next week.

The ministry added half the deaths from the coronavirus in India are below age 60. It says 37% of the deaths were between 45-60. Global research indicates the disease is particularly fatal for the elderly. Health experts in India say this anomaly could be because deaths among the elderly in India weren’t detected or they weren’t tested.

India is No. 3 in confirmed coronavirus cases at 1.8 million and No. 5 in deaths with more then 39,000, according to a worldwide tally by Johns Hopkins University.

10:55 a.m. Kosovo’s deputy prime minister says a coronavirus test was done.

Driton Selmanaj posted in Facebook that he was asymptomatic, self-isolating and would work from home. Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti tested positive on Sunday and is working from home.

After the release of the lockdown measures in May, Kosovo has noted a significant rise of the new daily cases. Last week, religious ceremonies and other activities were suspended to prevent spread of virus clusters. Public gatherings of more than five people in squares or parks are prohibited. Restaurants, cafes and night clubs cannot operate past 10:30 p.m.

Sports, cultural or entertainment activities are prohibited. Older and old people are encouraged to stay at home and restrict activities.

The Kosovo government reported that 9,274 showed and 269 deaths in total.

10:55 a.m. The Dutch Institute of Public Health reported that the number of others tested positive for coronavirus last week 2588, almost double that of last week.

According to the institute, a quarter of those who tested positive were twenty years old. The percentage of positives among tests is also higher; 2.3% compared to 1.1% last week.

Coronavirus infections in the Netherlands have been in effect since many restrictions were lifted that had effectively curbed the virus on 1 July. No new national measures have been re-established, however, officials in Rotterdam and Amsterdam will require others to wear a mask in busy markets and grocery stores. Wednesday.

In the week that followed, there have been six deaths from the virus, 3 fewer than a week earlier. The total for the Netherlands amounts to 6,150 deaths shown. The actual figure is higher because not all deaths from suspected coronavirus have been analyzed.

10:50 a.m. COVID-19 wreaked havoc on some of Toronto’s most vulnerable communities, but for two citizens of a new housing allocation in the city center, the pandemic was an unforeseen blessing.

Just a few months ago, Jason Greig and Rob Dods slept in tents. Today, the two men are among 149 in the past homeless citizens living in two apartment buildings rented by the city at the height of the pandemic.

The agreement reached between the Toronto Housing, Support and Housing Administration and the construction developer, Times Group Corporation, shortly after a series of breakouts in the shelter’s formula led to a wave of open-air camps in the city center.

Residents moved in late April and have since taken advantage of the amenities they were at a disadvantage when they were on the street: a hot shower, their own kitchen, air conditioning and privacy.

But the agreement never became permanent, and until the end of this month, the 149 citizens will have to move because the buildings are in a position to be demolished.

Greig and Dods said they were grateful for the program and would like to see the city look for features in the future.

Read more: Toronto’s COVID-19 housing allowance ends, citizens expect change

10:30 a.m. The Toronto Symphony Orchestra has announced that there will be no 2020-21 season as previously planned for the full orchestra.

Although the Nashville Symphony Orchestra would have made a decision, Matthew Loden, CEO of the TSO, acknowledges that his orchestra is “ahead of the curve” in doing so.

According to Loden, the Toronto Symphony has spent the past year working on a strategic plan “to evolve our orchestra in a way that reflects Toronto’s vibrancy, diversity and creativity.”

In other words, the orchestra will be divided into smaller ensembles to perform in a variety of places, hopefully, expanding success on its way.

10:15 a.m. Booking Holdings Inc. is the latest online travel giant to eliminate thousands of jobs after the coronavirus pandemic hammered the industry.

As much as 25 per cent of employees at Booking.com, the company’s biggest business, will be cut, the company said in a statement Tuesday. That’s about 4,000 workers. The reductions will be implemented globally.

Chief executive officer Glenn Fogel discussed the move during a video call with workers, saying the past five months represented “the largest social and economic crisis of our lifetime.”

The pandemic has hit Booking’s business hard and the wider travel industry remains under “significant pressure,” the CEO added. “In my heart, for a long time, I hoped that this would not happen. However, nothing can mitigate the impact this crisis has had, and will continue to have, on both the travel industry and our business.”

10:10 a.m. In the past two days, Ontario’s public fitness sets have reported fewer than one hundred instances of COVID1-9, adding 88 on Monday and 91 today, Health Minister Christine Elliott announced on Twitter. Combined over the same two days, there are 242 more solved with more than 42,000 tests processed. Currently, 29 of the 34 public fitness sets report five or fewer instances, and 16 of them do not report any new instances.

10:07 a.m. Commuter trains, buses and other public cars stayed away from the Philippines’ main roads on Tuesday and police re-established checkpoints to limit the public, as the outbreak of virus cases forced some other closure.

Officials deployed dozens of ferries, as well as army trucks, to send the medical corps of misery personnel and authorized company personnel. Most domestic flights to and from the capital have been cancelled and night curfews will return to some locations.

Crowds piled up in some supermarkets on Monday to inventory food after a hasty return to a lockout that sparked panicked purchases.

The lockdown is softer than the tax originally, which largely fully confined others to their homes for months, but is more severe than the quarantine restrictions to which the capital had recently been subject. It prevails in the city of Manila and in the outlying provinces for two weeks.

Companies in the past allowed to partially reopen, adding beauty salons, gyms, restaurants and tourist destinations, will be closed again. Licensed companies, which add banks, physical conditioners, and food processors, will have to go home to work. Bicycle, motorbike and personal car trips are allowed for essential reasons, but public shipping will be closed.

President Rodrigo Duterte agreed to reinstate the blockade after medical teams warned that the fitness care formula overcame patients with COVID-19. Health officials on Tuesday reported a record 6,352 new infections, bringing the country’s total to more than 112,500, adding 2,115 deaths.

9:46 a.m. The Ontario government says Windsor-Essex will participate in Phase 2 of the province’s COVID-19 reopening strategy for the time being.

While the rest of the province has moved to the more flexible restrictions of Phase 3, Windsor-Essex will remain in Stage 2 until further notice.

The province says the resolution is on the recommendation of fitness experts in the event of outbreaks among agricultural workers.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said the region will move to Stage 3 until it is safe.

The province says it is tracking local COVID-19 transmission and will make efforts to involve its spread.

He says that outbreaks, in agriculture and agri-food, pose unique challenges.

“We are working with our federal and local partners to provide the Windsor-Essex communities with what they want when they reopen,” Elliott said in a statement.

9:38 a.m.Moscow began to enforce its regulations on the use of masks vigorously amid a buildup of new cases of coronavirus in the last 3 weeks.

Police this week started issuing 5,000 ruble ($90 Cdn) fines to metro passengers in the Russian capital for failing to wear protection, state-run Tass news service reported, citing an unidentified person in law enforcement. Stores also have begun demanding customers wear masks after city hall stepped up inspections.

Moscow has had a mandatory mask policy in place since May 12, when it began easing a lockdown aimed at stemming the spread of the epidemic. While the rules on masks were relaxed on July 13, they remained compulsory on public transport, in medical centres and in shops. However, the requirements are widely flouted, with restaurants and shops full and few locals bothering to wear protection in public.

“The obligations imposed on corporations to comply with the coverage measures have not been revoked,” city broker spokeswoman Gulnara Penkova said tuesday. Moscow continues the regime of masks, he said.

The city is the epicenter of coronavirus infections in Russia, with 28% of the country’s total. The number of new daily instances in Moscow has increased from a low of 531 on July 16 and 691 new instances were reported on Tuesday.

The city council fined the department store for more than three hundred million rubles for violations of mask policy, Tass reported last week, introducing the head of Moscow’s advertising department, Alexei Nemeryuk.

Fines occur when Moscow prepares to open on September 1.

9:14 a.m., French President Emmanuel Macron announced that domestic caregivers who helped the elderly and disabled in the pandemic will get a bonus of up to 1,000 euros ($1,175) until the end of the year.

During a stopover in the southern French town of Toulon on Tuesday, Macron paid tribute to some 320,000 caregivers who provided an essential home for 1.1 million people in the country.

He says the bonus will be financed through a 160 million euro package from the state and authorities.

In the past, the French government had announced a bonus of up to 1,500 euros ($1760) for fitness personnel in hospitals and nursing homes running in spaces affected by the virus.

France, which has shown 30294 virus-related deaths since the pandemic, has almost caused the virus with a strict two-month national blockade.

Yet the country is now seeing an uptick in virus infections, notably as young people gather at cafes or dance parties and families get together for summer vacation.

9:14 a.m.Local government officials say 166 staff members have tested positive for coronavirus at a canning plant in a southern German city, where about 230 on a nearby vegetable farm have already been infected.

Local council in The county of Dingolfing-Landau in Bavaria said that the Mamming facility had been temporarily closed, the dpa news firm reported. All your workers are quarantined.

The first 43 infections were reported over the weekend after a first circular test. Officials have transmitted the virus from market farm staff to canned plant staff and are waiting for them to face a single outbreak.

New infections in Germany have increased in recent weeks as officials are facing small outbreaks in other parts of the country.

7.52am Bayer Leverkusen said midfielder Nadiem Amiri will miss his last Europa League match opposite Rangers on Thursday after being in contact with a suspected coronavirus.

The club says Amiri himself has reported “short-term” contact in his life and is becoming home for a week as a precautionary measure.

Leverkusen Sports Director General Rudi Vuller said in a “that Nadiem’s behavior is exemplary and important. Precisely because the number of infections is spreading in Germany, this is an example of a serious and guilty technique for the pandemic.”

Leverkusen takes a 3-1 lead in the first leg in March when they receive the Rangers on Thursday.

Amiri has played games for Leverkusen this season in all competitions.

6:56 a.m. China and the World Health Organization are discussing plans to hint at the origin of the coronavirus outbreak after an attack on the country through two experts from the United Nations agency, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced Tuesday.

Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told reporters that experts had conducted “preparatory consultations on cooperation in clinical studies on virus studies” during his two-week stay, which ended on Sunday.

His interviews focused on studies in population spaces, the environment, molecules, animal traceability and coronavirus transmission pathways, as well as additional clinical curriculums, Wang said.

Both sides also studied the imaginable animal source, intermediate host and direction of coronavirus transmission to “prevent and control the epidemic more effectively,” Wang said.

Wang said either party was implementing a plan for China’s contribution to the global search effort, a solution followed by the World Health Assembly, WHO. There has been no report on when this effort will begin in earnest.

The virus was first detected in the city of Wuhan in central China due to last year and has been connected to a wholesale food market where wild animals were sold. Scientists probably went from being a wild animal like a bat to humans through an intermediate species, in all likelihood the pangolin resembles an anteater.

However, China says a full investigation would likely have to wait until the pandemic is low and has rejected accusations that it delayed the publication of data to WHO at the start of the epidemic.

In 0608, the Italian air traffic controller supplier, ENAV, said the air in July showed symptoms of recovery after the coronavirus was stopped.

Air traffic in July 3 times higher than the previous month in Italy, when the first Western country hit hard through the coronavirus outbreak began to emerge from the blockade, ENAV reported Tuesday.

EnAV said 75,200 flights were recorded last month, 60% less than last year, but particularly more than june 26,000. A new recovery is expected in August. On the first weekend of August, flights have halved since last year.

Nearly half of flights in July were international, one quarter domestic and one-third were fly-overs with no take-off or landing in Italian airspace.

5:55 a.m. China aims to increase Hong Kong’s coronavirus testing capability to 20 times its current capacity, said the head of a team sent from Guangdong province to help the city in its worst outbreak in history.

China’s control team of approximately 60 other people will paint with the Hong Kong government and 3 mainland Chinese control corporations to process 100,000 to 200,000 samples a day, Yu Dewen said in a video interview published Monday through the media.

“Our main project is to help the Hong Kong government conduct large-scale testing for the population,” said Yu, who is an official at the Guangdong Health Checker. Yu also led the Guangdong delegation that he previously sent to Wuhan, the city in central China where the virus made the first impression last year.

5:48 a.m. Booking Holdings Inc. is the newest online giant that cut thousands of jobs after the coronavirus pandemic hit the industry.

Up to 25% of Booking.com workers, the company’s largest company, will be eliminated, the company said on a Tuesday. That’s about 4,000 workers. Discounts will be implemented globally.

CEO Glenn Fogel discussed the movement in a video call with workers, the more than five months represented “the greatest social and economic crisis of our lives.”

The pandemic has hit Booking’s business hard and the wider travel industry remains under “significant pressure,” the CEO added. “In my heart, for a long time, I hoped that this would not happen. However, nothing can mitigate the impact this crisis has had, and will continue to have, on both the travel industry and our business.”

The continued spread of COVID-19 has drastically reduced tourism, while halting most business trips in favor of video conferencing and other remote work. Airlines have announced huge job cuts, hotels have closed down and the online part of the industry has not been spared.

5:19 a.m. The United Nations chief says the coronavirus pandemic has led to the largest disruption of education in history, with schools closed in more than 160 countries in mid-July affecting more than 1 billion students.

In addition, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Tuesday that at least 40 million children worldwide have missed out on education “in their critical pre-school year.”

As a result, he warned that the world faces “a generational catastrophe that could waste untold human potential, undermine decades of progress, and exacerbate entrenched inequalities.”

“We are at a defining moment for the world’s children and young people,” Guterres said in a video message and a 26-page policy briefing. “The decisions that governments and partners take now will have lasting impact on hundreds of millions of young people, and on the development prospects of countries for decades to come.”

Guterres called for the reopening of schools once the local transmission of the virus is under control.

4:28 a.m. The number of passengers on a Norwegian cruise ship who have tested positive for the coronavirus has reached 43, authorities said Tuesday.

The MS Roald Amundsen outbreak has raised new questions about protecting cruise shipments during the pandemic, even when the industry is pushing to resume shipment after the close of March.

On Monday, the ship’s owner stopped everything and Norway closed its ports to cruise ships for two weeks.

The city of Trondheim reported on the two new instances: a man in their 60s with mild symptoms and a child under 10 without symptoms, claiming that they were both passengers on the ship. They’ve been identified.

A third passenger will be assessed on Tuesday, the city said. Trondheim is halfway to Tromsoe, north of the Arctic Circle, where the empty vessel is moored.

But as the cruise line acts as a local ferry, traveling from port to port along Norway’s west coast, some passengers have disembarked along the direction and possibly spread the virus to local communities.

A total of 69 Norwegian municipalities may have been affected, the Norwegian NTB news firm reported on Monday.

4 a.m. A challenge to the COVID-19 ban in Newfoundland and Labrador is expected to be heard in the province’s Supreme Court from Tuesday.

Halifax resident Kim Taylor and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association filed a claim in Newfoundland and Labrador’s Supreme Court in May, claiming the restrictions violate the charter and fall outside provincial jurisdiction.

The provincial government passed a law prohibiting permanent citizens and asymptomatic personnel from entering the province in key spaces.

Taylor was denied the opportunity to go to Newfoundland after his mother’s sudden death.

The agreement says it also defies amendments to the province’s Public Health Protection and Promotion Act, which allows police to stop and take others to “entry points” in the province, and allows for greater search powers.

The case is scheduled to be heard through Friday.

Taylor stated that he was denied his application for an exemption in order to go to the province of his home after his mother’s death, despite a 14-day self-isolation plan upon his arrival.

Although his case was later reconsidered and he granted an exemption from the provincial authorities, Taylor stated that the resolution came too late.

She said the legal challenge is to save others from avoiding the same experience.

12:17 a.m. The Trump administration’s plan to provide every nursing home with a fast COVID-19 testing machine comes with an asterisk: The government won’t supply enough test kits to check staff and residents beyond an initial couple of rounds.

A program that sounded like a replacement for the game when it was announced last month at the White House now raises considerations that it could become another damaged promise for nursing homes, whose citizens and staff represent a small portion of the U.S. population. for up to four deaths of a 10 Array coronavirus through some estimates.

“I think the biggest concern is that the tools can be delivered, however, it might not help if you don’t have the check kits,” said George Linial, president of LeadingAge of Texas, a branch of a national organization that represents nonprofit retirement homes and other senior care providers.

Monday

10:41 p.m. Bahamas Prime Minister Hubert Minnis on Monday announced a total closure of the country over the next two weeks, saying bed capacity and human resources were “increasingly in demand” in the face of a strong buildup of infections and hospitalizations. COVID-19.

“Our ICU beds are at capacity and noncritical care beds are approaching capacity,” Minnis said during a national address about the economic shutdown of the archipelago, just days after being spared by Hurricane Isaias. “We can and we will rebuild our economy and our society. But what we cannot do is bring people’s life back. We can rebuild, but we cannot re-create new life.”

On Monday, the Bahamas, whose population is about 385,000, confirmed 31 new infections —9 in the island of New Providence and 22 in Grand Bahama, which was put on a lockdown two weeks ago after it began leading the country in newly confirmed cases.

The new infections, Minnis said, gave a tally of 679 confirmed cases, the country’s highest since it confirmed its first case in March and forced the closure of all airports and seaports to outside visitors.

Monday 8:54 p.m. A member of the press who covered President Donald Trump’s trip to the Tampa Bay area Friday has tested positive for the coronavirus, according to the White House Correspondents’ Association.

The association’s president, Zeke Miller, a journalist for The Associated Press, wrote in a message to the organization on Sunday about the member’s test.

“We’ve already touched those in the pools with this person, and the White House medical unit is getting a new tactile search and offering follow-up tests for other people in pools and potentially exposed,” Says Miller’s message.

The positive verification took place on Sunday, just over a day after the journalist stood with dozens of other journalists and photographers, and lived in the same room as the country’s most sensible elected official at Pellea Golf Club in Belleair.

Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Rick Scott, state Sen. Wilton Simpson, Pinellas County Commissioner Kathleen Peters, State Rep. Danny Perez, and Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida CEO Justin Senior were in the room with the reporter.

Miller refused the reporter on Monday, bringing in confidentiality issues.

The White House declined to comment.

Monday 7:20 p.m.: Ontario’s plan to reopen schools that reduce the size of elegance for elementary students to COVID-19 is “disappointing” and “disturbing,” says a Toronto father.

Kelly Iggers, who works as a teacher-library for the Toronto District School Board, said it was almost to practice physical distance in already overcrowded classrooms.

On Saturday, he filed a petition asking the Ontario government for sizes of elegance. By Monday night, more than 65,000 people had signed it.

Iggers is involved in the lack of physical distance in schools can lead to coronavirus outbreaks in the community at large.

Prime Minister Doug Ford and Education Minister Stephen Lecce last week announced the full-time back-to-school plan for primary school students across the province this fall and a compound-time course schedule for the best students on the largest school boards. They also announced a mandatory face mask for students starting fourth grade and said the province would spend $309 million on non-public protective devices for educators, additional staff and cleaning supplies. But cutting the sizes of elegance for elementary school students is not a component of the plan.

Read Monday’s evolving dossier

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