An estimated 900 new cases of COVID-19 were reported on New Year’s Day in Alberta.
Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s chief medical officer of health, tweeted Saturday that 12,700 laboratory tests had been recorded on Jan. 1 with a seven per cent positivity rate.
Siksika Nation received its first shipment of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine, and began immunizing staff and residents at the Siksika Elders Lodge on Friday.
After news of Municipal Affairs Minister Tracy Allard’s Hawaii vacation was revealed, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney took responsibility for not being clear about travel rules for members of the legislative assembly at a press conference on Friday.
By 2 p.m. MT on Saturday, a total of five UCP MLAs were confirmed to have left Canada for holiday vacations — Lesser Slake Lake MLA Pat Rehn, Red Deer-South MLA Jason Stephan, Calgary-Peigan MLA Tanya Fir, Calgary-Klein MLA Jeremy Nixon, and Minister Allard.
A more complete COVID-19 update is next expected from the Alberta government on Jan. 4.
Albertans were told before the holidays to expect Twitter updates each day until Jan. 3.
On Jan. 4, the province is expected to post more complete updates online.
Hinshaw is scheduled to hold her next news conference on Jan. 5.
In spite of the pandemic’s crippling effect on many local businesses, the City of Edmonton said it gave out 4,736 new business licenses between March 1 and Nov. 30 in 2020.
A health-care aide at an extended care facility in Red Deer, Alta., has been charged under the Federal Quarantine Act after allegedly failing to isolate after a trip to the United States.
On Thursday, Alberta became the first province to officially say the NHL can play games in its arenas for the upcoming season.
New rules requiring air travellers to test negative for COVID-19 before entering Canada will kick in on Jan. 7, Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Thursday.
The 2020 tax seasonwill look different for many Albertans, financial experts say. For many, the pandemic changed their job situation, the source of their income and introduced unexpected expenses like medical or childcare.
More than 1,000 Albertans have now died from COVID-19.<br><br>The first 500 died over a span of nearly nine months.<br><br>The next 500 died in just over one month. <a href=”https://t.co/CbLokhVJH3″>pic.twitter.com/CbLokhVJH3</a>
Alberta’s total case count topped 100,000 on Wednesday as the province reported 18 more deaths for a total of 1,046 deaths. The average number of deaths per day has been trending sharply down since Dec. 27.
However, it took nearly nine months for Alberta to record its first 500 deaths; the next 500 came in just 34 days. Check out how it happened in this analysis.
More detail on what you need to know today in Alberta
Dr. Deena Hinshaw tweeted the latest estimated COVID-19 numbers on Saturday, saying there are roughly 900 new cases of the virus in the province, based on 12,700 tests, for a positivity rate of seven per cent.
Hinshaw’s next live update is scheduled for Jan. 5.
More than 100,000 Albertans have tested positive for COVID-19 over the course of the pandemic.
Hinshaw said earlier in the week that declining case numbers are in part due to fewer tests, and hospitalizations and the positivity rate have remained high.
As of Wednesday, there were 921 people in hospital, including 152 in intensive care, and another 18 people had died for a total of 1,046 deaths.
Click on the map below to zoom in or out on specific local geographic areas in Alberta and find out more about COVID-19 there:
Here is the detailed regional breakdown of active cases as per the latest update on Wednesday.
Calgary zone: 5,129, down from 5,244 reported on Tuesday (33,152 recovered).
Edmonton zone: 6,624, down from 6,701 (36,165 recovered).
North zone: 1,031, down from 1,034 (5,752 recovered).
South zone: 296, down from 302 (4,629 recovered).
Central zone: 1,430 down from 1,466 (4,995 recovered).
The nation’s first dose went to its oldest resident, Virginia Medicine Traveller, 94, Siksika Health Services said on Facebook.
Health workers on the First Nation, which is about 100 kilometres east of Calgary, announced on New Year’s Eve that they would begin immunizing residents and staff at the Siksika Elders Lodge on Friday at 1 p.m.
The care facility for Siksika elders was among those prioritized by the province to receive the vaccine as it provides continuing care for seniors.
“We are pleased to see that a safe and effective vaccine has been developed so quickly and made available to our most vulnerable nation members and their care providers,” Nioksskaistamik Ouray Crowfoot, chief of Siksika First Nation, was quoted as saying in a press release.
“Our health services continue to plan for a staged roll-out of additional vaccine to other priority groups in the near future.”
The total number of UCP MLAs confirmed to have left Canada for holiday vacations abroad has increased to five by Saturday afternoon.
On Friday, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney held a press conference and ordered MLAs not to leave the country unless it’s for government business after news that Municipal Affairs Minister Tracy Allard had travelled to Hawaii for vacation.
Allard apologized, calling the trip a “lapse in judgment.”
CBC News then confirmed that Calgary-Klein MLA Jeremy Nixon was also in Hawaii over the holidays. It is not clear when he left or whether he has returned.
Calgary-Peigan MLA Tanya Fir said on social media Friday night that she had recently been to the United States visiting her sister. In a Facebook post, she said that she has since returned and will abide by the new travel directive.
Pat Rehn, the MLA for Lesser Slave Lake, posted a statement on Facebook Saturday confirming he is on his way back to Alberta from a trip to Mexico.
Jason Stephan, MLA for Red Deer-South, is also returning from a trip abroad, Kenney’s press secretary Christine Myatt confirmed by email Saturday.
“MLA Stephan travelled to the United States and has indicated that he is returning to Alberta in line with the Premier’s directive,” she said.
To limit the spread of COVID-19, the Alberta government advises against non-essential travel on its travel restrictions page.
Entrepreneurs in Edmonton have found a way to open new businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic — thousands of them — despite the toll the pandemic has had on the economy and the restrictions faced in many industries.
The City of Edmonton said it gave out 4,736 new business licenses between March 1 and Nov. 30 in 2020.
It’s difficult to say whether all of these were first-time applicants, as the city doesn’t collect that information, a spokesperson told CBC News in an email.
A total of 23,462 business licenses in Edmonton, including renewals, were approved in the same timeframe.
Although food establishments make up a large number of visible new businesses in Edmonton, a range of industries had new startups.
In a statement to The Canadian Press on Thursday, the Alberta government said it approved Edmonton and Calgary for competition on Dec. 25 following the review of protocols outlined in the league’s return-to-play plan, along with some additional enhancements.
That confirmation is the first from any of the five provinces with NHL teams since deputy commissioner Bill Daly stated on Dec. 24 that the league believes it can play games in all seven Canadian markets.
The Canadian teams will only play each other during the regular season and the first two rounds of the playoffs as part of a newly formed North Division, and won’t be crossing the border with the United States, which remains closed to non-essential travel because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
As of Wednesday, 11,102 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in Alberta, Hinshaw tweeted Thursday, although she didn’t say how many were people who had received two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine that requires two doses to be effective.
Kenney had estimated Tuesday that 7,000 Albertans would have been vaccinated by the end of day, far short of the government’s pledge to vaccinate 29,000 health-care workers by the end of December.
Kenney said Alberta Health Services (AHS) had been holding back some vaccines for a second dose but would move forward to vaccinate as many people as possible to catch up, including scheduling vaccinations on New Year’s Day. Retired nurses and students were also being brought in to help speed up the rate of vaccinations.
Early on in 2020, Alberta was getting accustomed to looking across the country and feeling pride in its successful pandemic response, but now the province finds itself in uncharted territory. After keeping the disease relatively at bay for months, deferred decisions late in the year led to an unprecedented amount of illness and death.
Come winter, Alberta had the highest hospitalization rate in the country and test-positivity rates that were nearing 10 per cent. Thousands of people were told to do their own contact tracing after the provincial system was overwhelmed.
Medical experts and mathematicians tried to sound the alarm nearly two months ago about the trajectory the province was on. But the government was reluctant to impose new restrictions on Albertans’ liberties and economic activity. It rebuffed repeated calls for stricter public-health measures — for a time.
Meanwhile, the exponential growth continued unabated, with the number of new daily cases doubling every two to three weeks. Whether in response to the physicians’ warnings, or the fact that new case numbers were approaching the psychological barrier of 2,000 per day, the government eventually did act.
But by that time, the hospitalizations and deaths the province is now experiencing had been essentially baked in. Daily case counts have mercifully started to ebb, but the glut of disease that built up weeks ago is still filling more hospital beds and claiming more lives than Alberta has seen at any other point in the pandemic.
Remembering some of the Albertans who have been identified as killed by COVID-19:
And nearly 10 months after Alberta’s first presumptive COVID-19 case was confirmed, mothers across the province are giving birth to what some have dubbed the coronial generation.
Kennedy Amyotte’s first-born child will open her eyes to the world and see her mother’s face behind a mask.
For Amyotte, pregnancy during the isolation of the pandemic has been emotionally and physically exhausting. She spent weeks in quarantine following a COVID-19 diagnosis last month and wonders how she and her husband, Shane Flamond, will navigate parenthood in the uncertain months ahead.
Amyotte expects to tell her daughter about it someday, years down the road.
The winter holidays are usually the busiest season for air travel. But this year, about 80 per cent fewer travellers will pass through the doors of the Calgary International Airport in late December, according to the airport authority’s spokesperson.
But this year, the holidays fall amid the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, and many jurisdictions have discouraged all non-essential to prevent further spread of the illness. As a result, the airport authority predicted that only about 10,000 travellers would go through the Calgary airport “for the period before Christmas all the way through New Year’s,” said Feist.
“For those who have to travel for essential travel reasons, the airport remains open. And of course, our focus is on everyone’s safety as they move through the airport or arrive at the airport,” he said.
The Calgary airport is facing a $67-million deficit this year thanks to the unprecedented drop in demand for air travel caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews says the goal in 2021 is to get vaccines out and put the COVID-19 pandemic in the rear-view mirror, then work to fix a battered and beleaguered economy.
But with a $21-billion deficit and Alberta’s oil and gas economy still in flux, where’s the money going to come from?
“We will not cut our way out of a $21-billion deficit,” Toews said in a year-end interview with The Canadian Press. “We have to get the economy growing again. And economic recovery will very quickly become job No. 1 as we start to get past the pandemic.”
At the start of 2020, Kenney’s United Conservative government was busy trying to resuscitate an already suffering economy only to see COVID-19 blow everything apart and take with it Kenney’s key election promise to balance the deficit in his first term.
That goal is now a distant memory with a projected budget deficit this year tripling an original forecast of $6.8 billion. COVID-19 has slashed demand for energy, shuttered businesses and necessitated relief aid and job supports to keep people going.
For the latest on what’s happening in the rest of Canada and around the world on Thursday, see here.
Netflix on Thursday reported that its subscriber growth slowed dramatically during the summer, a sign the huge gains from the video-streaming service’s crackdown on freeloading viewers is tapering off.
The 5.1 million subscribers that Netflix added during the July-September period represented a 42% decline from the total gained during the same time last year. Even so, the company’s revenue and profit rose at a faster pace than analysts had projected, according to FactSet Research.
Netflix ended September with 282.7 million worldwide subscribers — far more than any other streaming service.
The Los Gatos, California, company earned $2.36 billion, or $5.40 per share, a 41% increase from the same time last year. Revenue climbed 15% from a year ago to $9.82 billion. Netflix management predicted the company’s revenue will rise at the same 15% year-over-year pace during the October-December period, slightly than better than analysts have been expecting.
The strong financial performance in the past quarter coupled with the upbeat forecast eclipsed any worries about slowing subscriber growth. Netflix’s stock price surged nearly 4% in extended trading after the numbers came out, building upon a more than 40% increase in the company’s shares so far this year.
The past quarter’s subscriber gains were the lowest posted in any three-month period since the beginning of last year. That drop-off indicates Netflix is shifting to a new phase after reaping the benefits from a ban on the once-rampant practice of sharing account passwords that enabled an estimated 100 million people watch its popular service without paying for it.
The crackdown, triggered by a rare loss of subscribers coming out of the pandemic in 2022, helped Netflix add 57 million subscribers from June 2022 through this June — an average of more than 7 million per quarter, while many of its industry rivals have been struggling as households curbed their discretionary spending.
Netflix’s gains also were propelled by a low-priced version of its service that included commercials for the first time in its history. The company still is only getting a small fraction of its revenue from the 2-year-old advertising push, but Netflix is intensifying its focus on that segment of its business to help boost its profits.
In a letter to shareholder, Netflix reiterated previous cautionary notes about its expansion into advertising, though the low-priced option including commercials has become its fastest growing segment.
“We have much more work to do improving our offering for advertisers, which will be a priority over the next few years,” Netflix management wrote in the letter.
As part of its evolution, Netflix has been increasingly supplementing its lineup of scripted TV series and movies with live programming, such as a Labor Day spectacle featuring renowned glutton Joey Chestnut setting a world record for gorging on hot dogs in a showdown with his longtime nemesis Takeru Kobayashi.
Netflix will be trying to attract more viewer during the current quarter with a Nov. 15 fight pitting former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson against Jake Paul, a YouTube sensation turned boxer, and two National Football League games on Christmas Day.
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