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The latest news on COVID-19 developments in Canada – The Record (New Westminster)

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The latest news on COVID-19 developments in Canada (all times Eastern):

3:45 p.m.

Nunavut will now count 12 additional cases of COVID-19, including three deaths, in the territory’s total case count.

The new numbers come from Nunavut residents who caught COVID-19 or died from the virus while in Manitoba.

Nunavut chief public health officer Dr. Michael Patterson said it’s been unclear since the start of the pandemic which jurisdiction these numbers would fall under.

The cases and deaths occurred between December 2020 and January 2021.

Patterson said attribution of cases of COVID-19 acquired outside the territory will continue to occur on a case-by-case basis.

2:50 p.m.

Health officials in New Brunswick are reporting one new case of COVID-19 today.

The case involves a person in their 40s in the Edmundston region that has been linked to a previous case.

Meanwhile, a second positive case has been confirmed at Ecole Notre-Dame in Edmundston, which has been closed for the next three days to allow for contract tracing and cleaning of the school.

The province currently has 42 active cases of novel coronavirus.

2:50 p.m.

Health Canada’s updated vaccine delivery website says Canada will get more than 2.5 times the number of doses of Pfizer-BioNTech in the next eight weeks, than were delivered in the last 14 weeks. 

The site, updated today, confirms more than 8.5 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine are to be shipped to Canada between March 22 and May 16. 

That includes almost 1.2 million doses in each of the next two weeks, and just over one million doses a week, for the next six weeks after that.

Moderna has not confirmed shipments past the end of March, and there is no date yet for the first shipments expected directly from AstraZeneca or Johnson and Johnson.

The Serum Institute of India is to ship another million doses of its AstraZeneca vaccine in April, and 500,000 in May, but there is not a specific date yet for when those will arrive.

Canada is also now supposed to get 1.6 million of AstraZeneca produced in South Korea before the end of May, but there isn’t a more specific timeline available yet for those either.

1:50 p.m.

Nova Scotia is reporting two new cases of COVID-19 today.

Health officials say one case is in the region including Halifax and involves a close contact of a previously reported infection. They say the other case is in the western part of the province and related to travel outside Atlantic Canada.

Nova Scotia has 15 active reported cases of the disease.

The province says it had administered more than 52,000 COVID-19 vaccines as of Tuesday, more than 17,000 of which were booster shots. 

1:35 p.m.

Manitoba is reporting no new COVID-19 deaths and 96 new cases. 

Three cases from unspecified dates have been removed due to data correction, for a net increase of 93. 

Health officials have also confirmed nine cases of the B.1.1.7 variant first identified in the United Kingdom.

12:45 p.m.

The Manitoba government has reduced the minimum age for COVID-19 vaccines by two years — to 53 and up for First Nations people and 73 and up for others. 

Those numbers do not include younger age groups with underlying health conditions that are already eligible for vaccination. 

The government has also launched a new web page so that people can book appointments online, in addition to the existing telephone call centre.

11:15 a.m.

Quebec is reporting 703 new cases of COVID-19 today and 13 more deaths attributed to the novel coronavirus.

Health officials are also reporting a sharp rise in the number intensive care patients, up 16 compared with the prior day, for a total of 107. Total hospitalizations dropped by one, to 532.

The province says it administered 28,812 doses of vaccine yesterday, for a total of 804,806.

Quebec has reported 299,450 COVID-19 infections and 10,570 deaths linked to the virus; it has 6,833 active reported cases.

10:30 a.m.

Ontario is reporting 1,508 new cases of COVID-19 today.

The province says 14 more people have died from the virus.

Today’s numbers are based on 49,128 tests.

More than 58,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered since yesterday’s update.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 17, 2021.

The Canadian Press

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Progressive Conservatives hold onto seat in eastern Ontario byelection

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The Progressive Conservatives have won a provincial byelection in eastern Ontario, retaining a seat previously held by a popular cabinet minister.

The Bay of Quinte provincial byelection today was held just one month after Todd Smith resigned the seat.

Voters have chosen to send Progressive Conservative candidate Tyler Allsopp to represent them in the legislature.

He has captured about 38 per cent of the vote, with most polls reporting, compared to about 33 per cent for Liberal candidate Sean Kelly.

Both candidates are municipal councillors in Belleville.

Smith won four successive elections in the region for the Tories, securing nearly 50 per cent of the vote in the last two elections, but some experts and polls suggested it may be a closer race this time around.

NDP candidate Amanda Robertson is trailing Allsopp and Kelly in third, with Green Party of Ontario candidate Lori Borthwick in a distant fourth.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Veteran linebacker Wynton McManis returns to Argos defence to face Ticats

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TORONTO – Wynton McManis will get a second shot at the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

The veteran linebacker returns Friday night when the Toronto Argonauts (7-6) host Hamilton (4-9). McManis missed six games with a groin injury.

“Man, that’s tough as hell,” said McManis, a trademark toothpick in his mouth. “Just seeing your brothers going out there and competing and laying it all on the line and feeling you have something to offer or want to offer something to be able to help, it’s hard.

“But we’re here now, they held it down … and I’m ready to go.”

The six-foot-one, 225-pound McManis registered 33 tackles, two special-teams tackles, a sack, interception and touchdown over Toronto’s first seven regular-season games. McManis, a Memphis, Tenn., native, has been a CFL all-star the last two seasons and helped Toronto win the ’22 Grey Cup.

Toronto comes off a solid 33-17 road win over B.C. last week. Its defence had seven sacks, including three from Ralph Holley, who’s tied for the league lead with seven overall.

“It brings a lot,” Toronto head coach Ryan Dinwiddie said of McManis’s return. “A lot of energy, a lot of focus, communication, it’s great for our lockerroom.

“He was with us in B.C. last week and shows veteran leadership even from the sidelines. We’re very excited to have him back … he’ll have a different energy.”

Especially facing Hamilton after being forced to miss the annual Labour Day showdown, which Hamilton won 31-28 on Sept. 2. McManis will also celebrate his 30th birthday Friday.

“Yeah, that’s fun,” McManis said with a grin. “It’s perfect.”

Hamilton can sweep the three-game series with a victory. But more importantly, the Ticats would pull to within four points of third-place Toronto with both teams having four regular-season contests remaining.

Conversely, a Toronto win would push Hamilton eight points back and deal its thin playoff hopes a severe blow.

“It’s an important game because it’s the next one,” McManis said. “But we understand what comes with it, we understand the importance of winning to reach our goals.

“It’s a playoff game for us.”

Hamilton has clinched the season series with Toronto but hasn’t recorded the sweep since 2019. The Argos also have much to play for as they’re currently just three points behind Ottawa (8-4-1), which hosts first-place Montreal (10-2-1) on Saturday.

Hamilton leads the CFL in net offensive yards (395.1 per game) and passing (321 per game). Veteran quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell has thrown for 3,682 and 23 TDs — both league highs — but also surrendered 13 interceptions (tied for most).

Mitchell is 14-2 all-time versus Toronto. Hamilton receiver Tim White has 11 catches for 246 yards and two TDs versus the Argos this season while Steven Dunbar Jr. had eight receptions for 151 yards and a touchdown in last week’s 31-27 win over Ottawa.

Running back Greg Bell, who ran for 99 yards and a TD versus Ottawa, is out with an Achilles injury. However, veteran James Butler, twice a 1,000-yard rusher, returns to the lineup.

“James Butler is a great running back in this league,” McManis said. “He and I have had some great battles throughout the years and this season so it will be a fun one.”

Toronto will be minus Janarion Grant (chest), who has a league-best four return TDs this season (three punt, one kickoff).

“We’re going to lose a little bit . . . Janarion has been pretty special and I think he’s up there with the best returners in CFL history,” Dinwiddie said. “We’ve got to find a way to play good football on offence and defence to where special teams doesn’t have to carry us.”

Hamilton head coach Scott Milanovich said his team heads into Friday’s contest in a good place.

“I think winning certainly helps the mood, the energy, the belief, the faith in what we’re doing,” he told Hamilton reporters this week. “They’re believing, they’re practising hard and they’re starting to see the fruits of those labours.”

Milanovich said Hamilton’s keys to success on Friday remain unchanged.

“It’s about protecting the football, penalties and explosive plays, protecting the quarterback and hitting their quarterback,” he said. “It’s never going to change.

“The last couple of weeks we’ve started to get that and hopefully we can keep it going.”

Toronto’s Chad Kelly is averaging 344 passing yards in his four starts this season and has won four of five career games versus Hamilton. Since 2021, the Argos are 10-4 against the Ticats, including 6-0 at BMO Field.

“Really, we just don’t want to lose this game,” Dinwiddie said. “We’ve got to stack up some wins to get ourselves locked into the playoffs and maybe try and get a home playoff game.

“Now, there will be a little added rivalry and I think the game will be physical. I know they’re feeling confident, they’ve beat us twice and we can’t take them lightly.”

Added McManis: “It’s like a self-esteem, self-respect type of thing at this point in the season. Who do you want to be? You should understand that. We go into each game each week wanting to win and put our best foot forward and put the best version of the Toronto Argonauts on the field.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 19, 2024.



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Ashleigh Buhai leads on LPGA Tour and Nelly Korda shows no sign of Solheim fatigue

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MAINEVILLE, Ohio (AP) — Nelly Korda had a tough time getting out of bed Thursday morning. Any Solheim Cup fatigue had no bearing on her standard of golf, a bogey-free 67 in the Kroger Queen City Championship that left her two shots behind Ashleigh Buhai.

Korda and Leona Maguire, who also had a 5-under 67, are among 11 players who competed in the Solheim Cup last week and got right back to work at the TPC River’s Bend. Savannah Grewal of Mississauga, Ont., also had a 67 on the day to be tied for fourth.

Buhai, a former Women’s British Open champion from South Africa, isn’t part of the Solheim Cup and had a few weeks to rest from an injury-plagued season. She ran off eight birdies for her 7-under 65, giving her a one-shot lead over Jeeno Thitikul and Yan Liu.

“Just shows that rest is just as important,” Buhai said. “I know if I give myself five days to warm up, with my coach coming in, we did good work, and, yeah, it was nice to actually just see it pay off today.”

Korda at least had the afternoon for nap time after her early start. She went 3-1 in her matches last week in the Solheim Cup as the Americans defeated Europe for the first time in seven years.

“I’m looking forward to the stay-in-bed-all-day vibe today. It was definitely tough kind of waking up this morning, but I do love competing and I love being out here,” Korda said. “Everyone that played last week is going to be tired. I’m just trying to take it one step at a time, know that my energy levels aren’t the greatest, but I’m still motivated.”

She found additional motivation not so much from her five birdies but keeping a clean card.

“There is just no greater feeling than minimized your mistakes, or making no mistakes,” Korda said. “Whenever you get to play a bogey-free round I feel like it motivates you, and hopefully I can take that energy into the next three days.”

Maguire only played two matches last week, having played all five matches her previous two appearances. She wasn’t pleased about being sat out, especially after she easily disposed of Ally Ewing (4 and 3) in singles.

But maybe there was one upside.

“Last couple of Solheims I’ve played five matches, been exhausted after the Solheim,” she said. “So nice to be a little bit fresher time around.”

Korda and Maguire were part of a large group at 67 that included Lydia Ko, who last played three weeks ago and had every reason to be floating on air. Along with winning Olympic gold just over a month ago, she captured the Women’s British Open at St. Andrews.

Ko said her big summer — winning the gold medal got her into the LPGA Hall of Fame — still hasn’t sunk in. She arrived in the Cincinnati area having to learn a new course. The tournament was held at Kenwood Country Club the last two years, which is going through some improvements.

“It’s a new golf course, so all of us are just trying to get used to this TPC course and just putting ourselves in position,” Ko said. “And sometimes I think when you do see low scores, you try and chase it too much, but I just tried to stick to my own kind of routine and my strategy.”

Hamilton’s Alena Sharp had a 69, while Maude-Aimee Leblanc of Sherbrooke, Que., shot 71.

Rose Zhang went 4-0 in her matches at the Solheim Cup — needing only 58 holes — and finished with three straight bogeys for a 73. Esther Henseleit had a 74, and the other seven Solheim Cup players were at par or better.

___

AP golf:

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