N.B. COVID-19 roundup: Full lockdown for Edmundston, 30 new cases in province - Action News
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New Brunswick

N.B. COVID-19 roundup: Full lockdown for Edmundston, 30 new cases in province

The Edmundston region, Zone 4, will go into a full lockdownat midnight Saturday night amid climbing case numbers and aseries of outbreaks.

Shephard, Dr. Russell share details of 14-day lockdown, new test sites and variant cases in Nova Scotia

Officers check for compliance with single-household bubble rules on Edmundston's Rue Saint-Franois on Friday. The region will move to a full lockdown Saturday night at midnight. (Bernard LeBel/Radio-Canada)

Latest

  • Dr. Russell on why she'll keep her kids in school in red phase
  • How the lockdown will work
  • Tightened travel restrictions for all zones
  • Road checks set up in Edmundston
  • 30 new cases, including one in Miramichi region
  • Moretesting centres set to come online
  • Two cases in Nova Scotia found to be variants of virus
  • MLA wants province to crack down on travelling between zones
  • Opposition leaders say support for COVID committee has its limits
  • Public exposure warnings

The Edmundston region, Zone 4, will go into a full lockdownSaturday at midnight amid climbing case numbers and aseries of outbreaks.

The evolution of the pandemic is "extremely worrying" in this area of northwestern New Brunswick, Dr. Jennifer Russell said at a live-streamed COVID-19 update Friday.

Cases have been reported in schools, workplaces and residences for the elderly, and the region has the highest number of active cases in the province.

Russell shared the spiralling case numbers that prompted Public Health to urge a lockdown.

On Jan 6, she said, there were seven active cases in Zone 4. That number doubledin just two days.

By Jan. 11, the number of active cases doubled again. Four days later, it doubled a third time and by Jan. 19, it had doubled a fourth time.

From those seven cases reported two weeks ago, there are now 129 active cases in Zone 4.

"At the current rate, that number will exceed 200 active cases early next week and potentially 400 active cases before the month is over," Russell said.

"We really can't let this go on."

During the lockdown, regulated health professionals will be allowed to remain open with active screening of patrons and closed waiting rooms, but will be encouraged to use virtual appointments whenever possible. (Radio-Canada)

How the Zone 4 lockdown will work

The lockdown, which takes effect Saturday night at midnight, will be in effect for 14 days and will be reassessed every seven days.

Health Minister Dorothy Shephard, speaking at the Friday update on COVID-19, said the decision to postpone the start of the lockdownto Saturday was to allow residentsget the suppliesthey need before businesses close and to give businesses and the Department of Public Safety time to prepare for the new rules.

She providedthese details ofthe lockdown in the Edmundston region:

  • All kindergarten-to-Grade 12 schools will close. Online learning only.
  • Service New Brunswick offices will close.
  • Only essential services can stay open.
  • A wage top-up of $3anhour will be available to early childhood educatorswho work duringlockdown.
  • Regulated health care professionals can stay open but provide virtual services where possible.
  • Grocery stores, NB Liquor stores and Cannabis NB stores will remain open.
  • Indoor gathering, including religious gatherings, must be virtual only.
  • Funerals will be limited to a single-household bubble.
  • Public spaces, including rinks and ski hills, will close.
  • Outdoor activities with household bubble will beallowed.
  • ATV and snowmobile trails will close.
  • Restaurants, salons, farmers markets will close. Drive-thru and takeout only.
  • Veterinary clinics can stay open with curbside animal dropoff.
  • Libraries will remain open to allow internet access.
  • People will be encouraged to work at home if possible.
  • Lottery tickets will be available online only.
  • Evictions will be banned until 10 days after lockdown ends.
  • Tech support will be available to students and staff experiencing connectivity issues related to online learning at1-833-453-1140.

A complete list of businesses that are allowed to operate will be posted on the provincial government's gnb.ca website.

Chief medical officer of health announces full lockdown for Edmundston region

4 years ago
Duration 5:29
Dr. Jennifer Russell announced Zone 4 will move to a full lockdown at midnight Saturday.

Speaking as a doctor, and as a mom

Dr. Jennifer Russell took a moment Friday to reassure parents who are worried about sending their children to school in red zones.

As reported by CBC News on Thursday, more than 14,000 students stayed home from school Wednesday, the day Zones 1, 2 and 3 rolled back to red-phase restrictions.

Russell said she knows it can be upsetting to be faced with decisions when you don't have access to all thediscussions and information that supported them.

But as a parent, she said, she wants other parents to know that she weighs the same concerns they do.

"When I speak to you up here, I wear my physicianhat," Russell said. "But I'm also a parent.I have two kids, two teenagers who attend school here in Fredericton one of them has asthma and I wouldn't knowingly do anything to put their healthat risk. So unless I get a call from Public Health informing me that they are a close contact of a case, they will be going to school in the red and orange levels."

Russell said the decision to keep schools open was made because they're "the safest place for our children to be."

"And that's not just an opinion. It's rooted in science."

In the 32 New Brunswick schools that have had COVID-19 cases, "we haven't seen a case where the virus was transmitted directly from one student to another."

While there has been transmission from students to staff, staff to students and staff to staff, Russell suggested parents should see the lack of student-to-student transmission as more significant and good news.

"Less than one half of one per cent of all New Brunswick students have contractedCOVID-19 and been exposed in their school," she said.

Health Minister Dorothy Shephard said the decision to postpone the start of the lockdownin the Edmundston region to Saturday night was to allow residentsget the suppliesthey need before businesses close. (Government of New Brunswick)

Tightened travel restrictions for all zones

Travel into New Brunswick will further be restricted for all health zonesas ofmidnight Saturday night.

Health Minister Dorothy Shephard detailed the changes Friday, noting that anyone entering the province will have to self-isolate for 14 days.

Exceptions will include those who travel back and forth daily for work, truck drivers, and those who must travel for medical care, child care and child custody.

"However," she said, "these travellers will still have to be tested weekly.

Residents of Pointe--la-Croix and Listuguj First Nation, in Quebec, may still cross the border for medical appointments and to fulfil child custody arrangements. They may also cross once a week to purchase essential items, Shephard said, but they will be subject to mandatory weekly testing.

Moretesting centres set to come online

Dr. Jennifer Russell is again urging residents to "get tested, even if you just have one symptom."

Testing in some zones is "not where it should be," Russell said at Friday's COVID-19 update.

The Miramichiregion, Zone 7, has repeatedly been flagged as having a low test rate, and on Friday, Russell said it has the lowest number of tests per 100,000 population in all of New Brunswick.

"The Miramichi region is at fourtests per 100,000 population," Russell said. By comparison, the Edmundston regionis at 308 tests per 100,000, and the rest of province is hovering at around 40 or 50 tests per 100,000, she said.

"Zone 7 is needing to have more tests for sure."

Several additional testing centres will be opening soon in Sussex, Sackville and Perth-Andover, and a new testing centre opened in the Zone 4 community of Clair this week, Russell said.

Health minister announces school closures, eviction ban in Edmundston region

4 years ago
Duration 7:09
Dorothy Shephard announced all schools must close and evictions won't be allowed during the lockdown in Zone 4.

Police to conduct roadside checks for compliance

Residents have been advised to avoid all non-essentialtravel into and out of the Edmundston region, Zone 4, which enters a full lockdownSaturday night at midnight.

Asked how this would be enforced, Health Minister Dorothy Shephard said that ifthere is "obvious non-compliance," Public Safety will be issuing fines and "there willbe consequences to some who decide to travel for non-essential reasons."

Road checks were set up in Edmundston on Friday to check for compliance with single-household bubbles.

The checks were being held toraise awareness of the province's emergency order, the Edmundston Police Force told Radio-Canada.

The force noted that checks would continue throughout the weekend, and that people found to be in non-compliance could face fines of $292.50.

Public Health reported 30 new cases on Friday. This graphic does not reflect a person with COVID-19 whose death was not related to the disease. (CBC News)

30 new cases, including one in Miramichi region

There are 30 new cases of COVID-19 in the province, Russell said, including one case in the Miramichi region, the first confirmed case in that region since Boxing Day.

The cases break down in this way:

Moncton region, Zone 1, eight cases:

  • an individual 20-29;
  • an individual 30-39;
  • two people 40-49;
  • two people 60-69; and
  • two people 70-79.

Saint John region, Zone 2, one case:

  • an individual 40-49.

Fredericton region, Zone 3, one case:

  • an individual 50-59.

Edmundston region, Zone 4, 19 cases:

  • an individual 19 and under;
  • two people 20-29;
  • an individual 30-39;
  • an individual 40-49;
  • three people 50-59;
  • two people 60-69;
  • three people 70-79;
  • six people 80-89.

Miramichi region, Zone 7:

  • an individual 60-69.

All cases are self-isolating and under investigation.

The number of confirmed cases is 1,087 and 742 have recovered. There have been 13 deaths, and the number of active cases is 331. Five patients are hospitalized,three of themin intensive care.

As of Friday, 181,797 tests have been conducted, including 2,215 since Thursday's report.

Premier Stephen McNeil, left, and Dr. Robert Strang during Nova Scotia's COVID-19 briefing Friday. McNeil confirmed Friday that two earlier cases have now been identified as variants. (Communications Nova Scotia)

Variant cases found in Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil confirmed Fridaythat two previous casesof COVID-19 were found to be variants of the virus.

McNeiltold a news briefingthe province also detected two variants of the virus in cases previously reported in December.

He said the two cases were related to travel outside Atlantic Canada and self-isolated as required. After further testing, one was found to have had the U.K. variant of COVID-19, while the other had the South African variant.

In New Brunswick, Dr. Jennifer Russell said no variant cases have been identified yet, but she noted she is "very concerned" about the variant getting into the province.

"We have sent 19 specimens to the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipegsince Dec. 23 to get sequenced for the variant and have had eight negative results," she said Friday. "We have six more to come this week."

The province has sent more specimens forvariant sequencing in the past two weeks, "just because we've had more cases overall," Russell said.

Nadeau plant outbreak just one of many clusters

The outbreak at the Nadeau poultry plant in the Edmundston area, where 28 employees have tested positive, is only one of multiple clusters of the virus in the region, Dr. Jennifer Russell said Friday.

Some of the cases outside the plant were caused by the Nadeau outbreak, but others had a different source,Russell said.

The province is still investigating how the outbreak at the poultry plant started.

Miramichi MLA Michelle Conroy of the People's Alliance says too many people from other regions are travelling into the Miramichi area. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

MLA wants crackdown on travelling between zones

Miramichi MLA Michelle Conroyiscalling on the province to crack down onresidents who continue to travel from one health zone to another at a time when non-essential travel is discouraged or against the rules.

Conroy said the Miramichi region, which is in the orange phase of recovery, has seen a lot of peoplefrom health zones that are in the red phase. She suggested these travellers were visiting Miramichi because it's safer.

"People are still travelling region to region," Conroy, of the People's Alliance, said on Information Morning Fredericton.

Under Public Health guidelines, necessary travel is only recommended between orange zones or between red zones but not between red and orange zones.

Conroy said she has heard of people from the Moncton region visiting stores in the Miramichi area, and she's askedher constituents to report suchsightings. It wasn'tclear how a Miramichi resident can knowsomeone is from Moncton.

But she said residents in other zones need to follow the rules and should face consequences if they don't.

"That's completely not acceptable."

At the same time she's concerned about visitors from red zones, Conroy is pushingthe province to easerestrictionsand allow Zone 7to move back to yellow phase so residents can expand their bubbles.

Until Friday, there had been no activecases of COVID-19 in the Miramichi region since Dec. 26. One case was reported on Friday.

Conroy said the heavy restrictions aretaking a toll on people, particularly on their mental health.

"We should be able to see our family and be able to relax the rules around our loved ones a little bit."

Health Minister Dorothy ShephardsaidConroy had some legitimate points, but stressed that everyone is at risk of COVID-19 in New Brunswick, regardless of their health zone.

"Caution is there for everyone to knowthey are vulnerable as their neighbours."

Public Safety has increased enforcement inspections across the province.

"We're tryingvery hard to let people know, zone-to-zone transmission is real."

Members of all-party cabinet committee don't always see eye to eye

New Brunswick's all-party COVID cabinet committee is still intact, but opposition members say their support has its limits.

Earlier this week, People's Alliance leader Kris Austin spoke out in frustration after the government suddenly changed the rules of the red phase of recovery and keptschools open if they didn't have any cases.

Interim Liberal Leader Roger Melanson said Friday thathe'll support decisionsbased on advice given by New Brunswick Public Health.

But Melanson saidhe's not on the committee to support PremierBlaine Higgs or the Progressive Conservative government.

"We need to do everything we can as political leaders, for people to be in a position to be in the safest possible circumstance," Melanson said during anInformation Morning interview with some members of the all-party cabinet.

GreenParty Leader David Coon said the committee, which was established early in the pandemic,is a great way to include a range of perspectives in decision-making, but he shared Austin's concerns about recent conflicting messages.

Coon said the province could havedone a better job preparing residents for the new version of the red phase.

"Lots of people are worried they're doing the wrong thing and don't want to make a mistake," Coon said. "That's what happens when rules change quickly without warning."

Health Minister Dorothy Shephard admits communication hasn't been perfect, but she blamed this on an evolving understanding ofCOVID-19 and how to manage it. Everyday, officials are learning something new, she said.

"This is about supporting the people of New Brunswick."

Public exposure warnings

Public Health has identified a positive case in a traveller who may have been infectious on the following flight:

  • Jan. 3 Air Canada Flight 8910from Toronto to Moncton, arrived at 11:23 a.m.

Public Health has also issued the followingpotential COVID-19 exposure warnings:

Edmundston region:

  • Sparta Progression Gym,113 44thAve. D., on Jan. 13 and Jan. 15 between 7 and 9 a.m.

Moncton region:

  • Goodlife Fitness Centre,175 Ivan Rand Dr. E., on Jan.13 from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m.
  • Moncton North After Hours Medical Clinic, 1633 Mountain Rd.,on Jan.14 from 5:00 to 7:30 p.m.

Edmundston region:

  • Jean Coutu Kim Levesque-Cote Pharmacy, 276 Broadway Blvd., Grand Falls, on Jan. 7 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
  • Parts for Trucks,21 Powers Rd., Grand Falls,on Jan. 11, 12 and 14 from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

What to do if you have asymptom

People concerned they might have COVID-19 symptoms cantake a self-assessment test online.

Public Health says symptoms shown by people with COVID-19 have included:

  • A fever above 38 C.

  • A new cough or worsening chronic cough.

  • Sore throat.

  • Runny nose.

  • Headache.

  • New onset of fatigue, muscle pain, diarrhea, loss of sense of taste or smell.

  • Difficulty breathing.

In children, symptoms have also included purple markings on the fingers and toes.

People with one of those symptoms should:

  • Stay at home.

  • Call Tele-Care 811 or their doctor.

  • Describe symptoms and travel history.

  • Follow instructions.

With files from Elizabeth Fraser, Information Morning Fredericton, Radio-Canada