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Toronto

Ontario sees 340 new COVID-19 cases the most since late June

Ontario reported 340 new cases of COVID-19 this morning, the most on a single day since June 26 and a considerable jump relative to recent Fridays.

Ministry of Health reported COVID-linked death of person under 19

Ontario has been in Step 3 of its reopening plan for three weeks as of today. (Lars Hagberg/Canadian Press)

Ontario reported 340 new cases of COVID-19 Friday,the most on a single day since June 26 and a considerable jump relative to recent Fridays.

Because testing levels in the province are cyclical on a weekly basis, it's usually most informative to compare the same days of the week.

Last Friday, Ontario logged 226 further infections, and the Friday before that saw 192reported.

The seven-day average of daily cases rose to 216, its highest point in just more than a month.

The additional cases today include 80 in Toronto, 41 in York Region, 36 in Peel Region, 23 in Windsor-Essex and 22 in Waterloo Region.

The Ministry of Health also recorded the deaths of 18 more people with the illness.A spokesperson said, however, that 16of those deaths happened "more than six weeks ago" and wereincluded in today's update as part of a data clean up by Public Health Ontario.

Among those who died was a person under the age of 19, the spokesperson said the fifth death in that age bracket since the pandemic began.

Here are some other key pandemic indicators and figures from the ministry's daily provincial report:

Tests completed: 23,448

Provincewide test positivity rate: 1.4per cent, marking nine consecutive days above 1 per cent

Current number of active cases: 1,879

Patients in ICUwith COVID-related illnesses: 110; 76 needed a ventilator to breathe

Death toll: 9,392

Vaccinations progress: 53,975, the fewest shots administered on a Thursdaysince March 10.Roughly 71.4 per cent of Ontarians aged 12 and older have had two doses.

Province launches 2 GO bus mobile clinics

Also Friday, the province announced it is partnering withMetrolinxto offer a new and convenient option to getvaccinated.

Two GO buses have been temporarily retrofitted to serve as mobile vaccine clinics as part of the province's last mile strategy to target unvaccinated or one-dose Ontarians.

The GO-VAXX buses will stop at malls, festivals, community hubsand events throughout the summer and fall across the Greater Golden Horseshoe.

No appointments are needed and anyone aged 12 and up can gettheir first or second dose of Pfizer until supplies run out.

With files from the Canadian Press