COVID-19 case announced for St. Margaret's Bay Elementary - Action News
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Nova Scotia

COVID-19 case announced for St. Margaret's Bay Elementary

Nova Scotia announced a COVID-19 case connected to an elementary school late Tuesday. Earlier in the day, the province announced 10 new cases of the coronavirus.

School is located in the central health zone, and will be closed Wednesday for deep cleaning

The main entrance of a single story school is seen. The walls are made of red-brown brick and the front doors are under a metal awning.
A COVID-19 case has been connected to St. Margaret's Bay Elementary in the Head of St. Margarets Bay community. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

Nova Scotia announced a COVID-19 case connected to an elementary school late Tuesday. Earlier in the day, the province announced 10 new cases of the coronavirus.

In a news release issued Tuesday evening, the province said St. Margaret's Bay Elementary will be closed Wednesday for deep cleaning.

The schoolis located in the central zone and is the fifth school in the province where a case of COVID-19 has been reported.

Parents and staff will be notified when the school is going to reopen.

The news release said all close contacts in the school have been identified.They will be notified by public health and told to self-isolate and get tested.

School-based cases

The other schools in the central zone where cases have been reported are:

  • Graham Creighton Junior High in Cherry Brook.
  • Auburn Drive High in Cole Harbour.
  • Bedford South School.

Two cases have been identified at Northeast Kings Education Centre in the western health zone.

EarlierTuesday, Nova Scotia reported10new cases of COVID-19, all in the central zone. With the St. Margaret's Bay Elementary case, that bringsthe province's total active cases to 143.

No one is in hospital related to COVID-19 in Nova Scotia.

At Tuesday's COVID-19 briefing, Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Robert Strang saidhe's heartened the new case numbers are stabilizing, but added that each new positive case has an average of eight close contacts. In the first wave, that number was just three.

Nova Scotia labs completed 4,138tests Monday, the highest number of daily tests conducted since the start of the pandemic.

An additional275 tests were administered at arapid-testing site in Halifax and 585 at a similarsite in Wolfville. There were no positive results at either site.

Mobile testing units

Premier Stephen McNeilsaid to date over 5,000 people have been given the rapid test, with 21 of them, all without symptoms,testing positive. Those people were told to self-isolate and instructed to take the standard test to verify their result.

Strang said two six-metre mobile units have been outfitted for deployment to outbreak areas. The mobile units will administer the standard test and not the rapid test.

"This mobility is it gives us a much better tool to be agile and flexible as needed across the province," Strang said.

One of these new units will be in place Wednesday at the Northeast Kings Education Centre in Canning, where two positive cases were identified, one last week and another on Sunday.

A full list of exposuresin the province can be foundhere.

New restrictions in effect

New restrictionscame into effectlast weekin most of the Halifax Regional Municipality and parts of Hants County. Strang urged people to observe travel restrictions into and out of the Halifax area.

"If you live in the Halifax areas, stay in the Halifax area unless it's for work, school or medical treatment. If you live outside the Halifax areas, don't come in unless it's for work, school or medical treatment."

The restrictionsinclude stopping dine-in service at bars and restaurants and closing gyms,libraries, museums and casinos until Dec. 9.Masks are alsomandatory in common areas of multi-unit dwellings like apartments and condos.

At the briefing, Strangaddressed people who are resistant to wearing masks when they have no valid reason for not wearing one.

"Stop looking for loopholes, stop making excuses, stop arguing with the people who drive our buses, who work in our access centres and who manage our retail stores when they ask you to put on a mask," he said.

'Stop making excuses' for not wearing a mask, N.S. chief medical officer says

4 years ago
Duration 2:54
Nova Scotia chief medical officer Dr. Robert Strang says there are valid reasons medical reasons to not wear a mask his son, in fact, has a disability that prevents it. But those people are few and far between and he had harsh words for those who are simply flouting public health rules.

A list of what's open and closed in the Halifax region can be foundhere.

Across the province,visitations to long-term care facilities are no longerallowedunless the person is a volunteer or designated caregiver.

All other Atlantic provinces, most recently New Brunswick, have brought back mandatory 14-day self-isolation for travellers. Nova Scotia's policy on regional travel remainsunchanged.

Very different holiday season

Strang said holiday traditions are going to be very different this year, with "smaller and fewer gatherings and less travel." He said the spirit of the holiday season was more important than ever.

"I really encourage people to focus on what we have around gratitude and generosity, kindness and community, compassion and caring. Focus on those and how you give those, not what we're not able to do."

COVID casesin the Atlantic provinces

The latest numbers from the Atlantic provinces are:

  • New Brunswickreported sevennew cases Tuesday and has a total of 116 active cases.
  • Newfoundland and Labradorreported onenewcaseTuesdayand has 33 activecases.
  • P.E.I.reported nonew cases Tuesdayandhas fouractive cases. One of the cases announced Saturday is a high school student.

Symptoms

Anyone with one of the following symptoms should visit the COVID-19self-assessment websiteor call 811:

  • Fever.
  • Cough or worsening of a previous cough.

Anyone with two or more of the following symptoms is also asked to visit the website or call 811:

  • Sore throat.
  • Headache.
  • Shortness of breath.
  • Runny nose.

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