RECENT EVENTS:
Ottawa Public Health showed thirteen new coVID-19 cases in the city on Wednesday.
The Ottawa-Carleton District School Board plan to return the school’s best students to elegance for as little as five hours a week this fall has left parents surprised and disappointed.
Parents now have until Sunday, Aug. 16, to decide whether to send their children back to school or opt for remote learning. The two-day extension was announced late Wednesday afternoon.
NOTE The OCDSB administrator says delaying the start of the school year is an option:
The city of Ottawa will earn approximately $124 million as a component of the first phase of a federal-provincial investment agreement to help cities facing declining revenue and price hikes as a result of COVID-19. Approximately $75 million will be used for transit infrastructure.
On Wednesday, Donna Gray, the city’s executive director of media and social services, showed that five other people who had stayed at the Carling Family Circle Shelter had tested positive for COVID-19.
Four of these new cases involve other people from 3 families who had already tested positive last week. In total, to date there have been 8 positive cases among 4 families.
The total number of existing instances in the city is 2669 known instances, representing 150 active instances, 2255 resolved instances, and 264 COVID-19-like deaths.
Overall, public fitness officials reported approximately 4,100 cases in eastern Ontario and western Quebec, with more than 3,500 cases resolved.
COVID-19 killed 102 other people in Ottawa’s outdoor domain: 52 in Leeds, Grenville and Lanark counties, 17 in other parts of eastern Ontario and 33 in Ottawa.
Ottawa is in the third phase of Ontario’s reopening plan, opening more businesses, adding restaurants and movie theaters.
Indoor meetings of up to 50 others and outdoor meetings of up to a hundred are now allowed in this province, however, participants must adhere to physical distance guidelines.
Quebec has rules, with its limit on physically remote meetings in public, now has up to 250 people, allowing for smaller festivals.
The Canadian Museum of Science and Technology will reopen on Friday and the Canadian Museum of Nature is scheduled to reopen on September 5.
Most ottawa Public Library branches will be open for in-person navigation and PC use on August 17.
Ontario elementary school students will return to school full-time in September, while the maximum students at the top schools will divide their time between learning and online learning, according to the board.
Individual councils have begun to incorporate new guidelines.
Quebec updated its school plans in early August, adding that the mask is mandatory in hallways for fifth graders onwards.
The new coronavirus is basically transmitted through droplets when an inflamed user coughs or sneezes over another user or object. People don’t want the symptoms to be contagious.
This means physical distance measures like running from home, gathering other people outdoors as much as you can imagine and staying away from anyone you don’t live with or haven’t been near you, adding when you dress in a mask.
Masks are now mandatory in public places closed to eastern Ontario and Quebec, where transit officials and taxi drivers must now deny access to users over the age of 12 who refuse to use one.
The masks are also outdoors when you can’t stay at the right distance from others.
Anyone waiting for the result of a COVID-19 check in Ontario will have to isolate themselves at least until they know the result. Quebec asks others who expect to isolate themselves only in certain circumstances.
The Ontario Medical Director of Health strongly recommends self-isolation for others with weakened immune systems, and OPH recommends that others over the age of 70 stay home as much as possible.
Senior medical officials say others are prepared for the option that COVID-19 restrictions will last until 2022 or 2023.
COVID-19 can range from a cold-type illness to a severe lung infection, with non-unusual symptoms such as fever, dry cough, vomiting and loss of taste or smell.
Less common symptoms come with chills, headaches and pink eyes. Children would possibly expand a rash.
If you have any symptoms, call 911.
In Ontario:
In Ottawa, any resident who feels they want a test, even if they have symptoms, can do so at one of the 3 sites.
Inuit in Ottawa can call Akausivik’s Inuit family health team at 613-740-0999 for services, exams, inuktitut or English Monday through Friday.
In the East Ontario Office of Health area, there is a self-service center in Casselman that can take care of two hundred tests a day and assessment centers in Hawkesbury and Winchester that do not require others to call ahead.
Others in Alexandria, Rockland and Cornwall require an appointment.
In Kingston, Leon’s Center is the city’s headquarters. Meet him at gate two.
The Napanee Verification Center is open to others who call to schedule an appointment.
You can set one up in Bancroft, Belleville, or Trenton by calling downtown and Picton by text message or call.
OBSERVE inequality and return to school:
The Leeds, Grenville, and Lanark unit asks you to get tested if you have any symptoms or considerations of exposure.
He has a walk-in at Brockville at Memorial Center and checks in Smiths Falls and Almonte that require an appointment.
Residents call their circle doctor and those who do not have access to a family circle doctor can call 1-844-727-6404 to check in for a check or if they have physical fitness problems similar to COVID-19 or not.
Citizens of Ottawa can now visit Gatineau five days a week on 135 Blvd. Saint-Raymond and recurrent clinics by appointment in communities such as Gracefield, Val-des-Monts and Fort-Coulonge.
In mid-August, waiting times for effects were longer here than in some other regions of Quebec.
First Nations:
Local communities have declared a state of emergency, instituted a curfew or both.
It has a COVID-19 cell verification site that can be obtained by appointment only. Anyone who returns to the network in the Canadian aspect of the outer border and is more than 80 kilometers away is invited to isolate themselves for 14 days. It’s a hundred miles or 100 miles from the American look.
Anyone interested in Tyendinaga can call 613-967-3603 to speak with a nurse. Face masks are now mandatory in their public buildings.
Pikwakanagan residents can make an appointment for a COVID-19 by calling 613-625-2259.
Kitigan Zibi is making plans for the August 29 election with adjustments according to the status of the pandemic at the time. He plans to start opening schools and day care centers next month.
Add “good” to your morning and night.
A variety of enchanted newsletters, delivered directly to your home.
Public Relations, CBC P.O. Box 500 Station A Toronto, ON Canada, M5W 1E6
Toll-free number (Canada only): 1-866-306-4636
TTY Editor / Teletype: 1-866-220-6045
It is a priority for CBC to create a website that is accessible to all Canadians including people with visual, hearing, motor and cognitive challenges.
The encoded subtitles and video described are available for many CBC systems transmitted by CBC Gem.