John Tory says COVID-19 pandemic will cost Toronto $1.5B as city announces 249 new cases - Action News
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Toronto

John Tory says COVID-19 pandemic will cost Toronto $1.5B as city announces 249 new cases

Mayor John Tory, Dr. Eileen de Villa, the city's medical officer of health, and Toronto Fire Chief Matthew Pegg, head of the city's emergency response team, spoke at a city hall news conference Thursday afternoon.

Sidewalk Labs cancelled plan for high-tech waterfront neighbourhood citing COVID-19 uncertainty

Toronto Mayor John Tory is expected to announce additional details this week concerning ActiveTO, a new plan to close some city streets in an effort to encourage people to be active outdoors while maintaining social distancing. (Cole Burston/The Canadian Press)

Toronto officials reported 249 newcases of COVID-19 on Thursday,as the city continues to grapple with deaths and daily new cases of the novel coronavirus.

Dr. Eileen de Villa,the city's medical officer of health, reported that 522 have now died of the virus in Toronto.

There are 397people in hospital with 102in intensive care units due to COVID-19, she added, figures that both increased slightly from Wednesday.

The city says there isa total of 6,914 cases, and4,364people have recovered.

De Villa announced the new numbers at a news conference at city hall on Thursday, joined by Toronto Mayor John Toryand Toronto Fire Chief Matthew Pegg, head of the city's emergency response team.

De Villa also reportedthat 13 staff and seven children have now tested positive at the Jesse Ketchum Early Learning and Child-care Centre, one of the city's seven licensedlocations providingcare for the children of essential and critical- care service workers.

The new numbers represent an increase from de Villa'supdate last week, when shereported six positivecases among staff and a single positive case affecting a child at the centre.

One staff member has also tested positive at the city'sFalstaff Early Learning andChild Care Centre, de Villa said, adding that no children are currently showing signs or symptoms of COVID-19.

Pandemic to cost city $1.5B, Tory says

Meanwhile, Tory is calling on the federal government to providefunding to municipalities across the country.

Tory says city staff have "crunched the numbers" and determined that under a best case scenario, the pandemic will cost Toronto $1.5 billion.

"We need immediate federal funding so that we can keep people safe and then be ready to drive Canada's economic recovery," Tory said Thursday.

"We have serious problems as cities," Tory added, which he said will be key to the country's economic recovery.

While Tory said there hasn't been confirmation from the federal government for additional funding, he said "active discussions" are underway.

At the city's first virtual Board of Health meeting Thursday, there was unanimous approval of a motion to request both provincialand federal support for Toronto's COVID-19 response, de Villa said.

That funding will advance Toronto's "important work" in curbing cases of the virus, while continuingto address challenges including housing affordability, access to social services and use of public space, the city said in a news release issued Thursday.

Watch:Dr. Eileen de Villa provides additional details onthe Board of Health's first virtual meeting

Board of Health discusses next steps for opening up Toronto

4 years ago
Duration 1:35
Dr. Eileen de Villa, the city's medical officer of health, summarized the topics discussed at the Board of Health's first virtual meeting Thursday, which include details concerning the city's COVID-19 recovery plan.

Sidewalk Labs plan cancelled

Sidewalk Labs, a Google-affiliated company, announced Thursday that it's abandoning its plan to build a high-tech neighbourhood on Toronto's waterfront, citing what it calls unprecedented economic uncertainty.

The project, dubbed Quayside,was set tofeature a range of cutting-edge technology, from residential towers made of timber to the use of autonomous cars andheated sidewalks.

An aerial view of a city waterfront that's largely concrete parking lots and empty space.
Sidewalk Labs is abandoning its plan to turn this industrial section of Toronto's waterfront into a so-called 'smart city.' (Sidewalk Labs)

"Sometimes business deals just don't end up happening, we've seen this more than usual during the course of the pandemic," Tory said at the news conference Thursday.

He added that the area continues to be a "key, untapped" area of the waterfront an opportunity he said he's confident other partnerswill be eager to take on.

"We will have a number of people I'm sure that will want to come forward and do something exciting on that location," he said.

Some of his goals for the waterfront, Tory said, include turning the neighbourhood into an area that will provide new jobs, economic opportunities, better transportation, sustainability features and affordable housing.

ActiveTO details expected this week

These updates comeone day after the mayorannounced a new plan called ActiveTO, in which city staffwill create more space for people to get outside and move around safely.

As part of the new plan, the city says it will create50 kilometres of "quiet streets," which will be closed to all but local traffic, as well as additional cycling infrastructure.

Although the city hasn't yet confirmed which streets will be closed, they are expected to include major roads near trails and attractions where there has been crowding.

The goal of the project, the city said, is to encourage outdoor activity while maintaining physical distancing requirements.

The city is expected to provideadditional details of the plan this week.

Trees are fenced off at Trinity Bellwoods Park to enforce physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic. The city says it's introducing a plan to close some roads near trails and attractions as a way of providing more room to promote outdoor activity while stopping the spread of the virus. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Meanwhile, advocates are calling on the city to reopen some of Toronto's green spaces, not just city streets.

Jennifer Keesmaat, the city's former chief city planner, says funnelling people into smaller spaces jeopardizes public safety.

"If the goal is safety and public health and we recognize being outside is not a bad thing, it's a good thing, then we need more space outside, not less," she told CBC Toronto.

"Constraining the space in the city where the public can safely socially distance orphysically distance is actually counterintuitive, it creates a problem rather than solving a problem."

With files from Lisa Xing