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Coronavirus: What's happening in Canada and around the world on Tuesday

Ontario is widening its vaccination plan in hard-hit areas and Premier Doug Ford hinted at further restrictions as the country's most populous province faces a growing strain on hospitals and intensive care units from COVID-19 cases.

Alberta and Quebec tighten some restrictions, Ontario expands vaccination plan in hot spots

Ontario Premier Doug Ford answers questions from the media at the Seneca College mass vaccination site during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

The latest:

Ontario Premier Doug Ford's cabinet has approved a provincewide stay-at-home order and will close non-essential retail stores for all but curbside pickup, multiple sources told CBC News Tuesday night.

The move comes in the wake of criticism that restrictions announced last week what the government called"emergency brake"measures are insufficient to slow the spread of Ontario's third wave of COVID-19.

Sources familiarwith cabinet's decision said the stay-at-home order would take effect at 12:01 a.m. ET Thursday and last up to four weeks.

The sources said only grocery stores and pharmacies would be permitted to stay open for customers to shop indoors. They said big box retail stores would be restricted to selling only grocery andpharmacy items for in-person shopping. Gardencentres would also be permitted to stay open, according to the sources.

Ontario is also widening its vaccination plan in hard-hit areas and Premier Doug Ford hinted at further restrictions as the country's most populous province faces a growing strain on hospitals and intensive care units from COVID-19 cases.

Residents aged 50 and over in "hot spot" postal codes 90 or so neighbourhoods in 13 public health units that were identified by Ontario's COVID-19 science advisory tablecan start signing up for vaccines in thecoming weeks, health officials said Tuesday.

Many of those who will be eligible under the initiative are essential workers,officials said,though they did not say exactly when it will begin.

However, younger essential workers likely won't have access to shots untilmid-May at the earliest, according to information officials presented.

The update toPhase 2 of Ontario's vaccine rollout came as Ford is under increasing pressure to tighten restrictions beyond the28-day provincewide "shutdown" that took effectSaturday.

A security guard gestures as people arrive at a mass COVID-19 vaccination site operated by the City of Toronto in East York Town Centre on March 24. The site serves the Thorncliffe Park community, an area disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. (Cole Burston/The Canadian Press)

In a letter dated April 4, medical officers of health in Toronto, Peel Region and Ottawa urgedthe province to impose stronger public health measures immediately, saying a provincial stay-at-home order is needed now.

On Tuesday, Toronto Public Health announced it isclosing all public schools and going to remote learning on WednesdayuntilApril 18 (a span that will include the delayed March break). The agency is using a Section 22 order,which allows the city's medical officer of health to strengthen rules beyond what the province has put in place.

This comes a day afterDr. Lawrence Loh, Peel's medical officer of health, announcedthat he would use his authority to close schools in Brampton, Mississauga and Caledon for the next two weeks. The region's weekly case rateas well as its seven-day average of test positivityare both the highest in Ontario right now.

At Tuesday's briefing, Ford, who isdueto speak withPrime Minister Justin Trudeau later in the day,signalled newrestrictions ahead for the provincebut did not offerspecifics.

"We're going to have further restrictions moving forward,very, very quickly," he said.

Ford also notedmalls in hot spotswere packedover the weekend, specifically pointing to Yorkdale Shopping Centre in Toronto, and said officials will discuss options to address"the issues we're seeing in retail settings."

WATCH | Ontario needs tougher restrictions, says specialist:

Ontario premier warns of new restrictions, pushes for more vaccines

3 years ago
Duration 1:56
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Tuesday that new restrictions to curb rising COVID-19 numbers are coming to 'hot areas' of the province and he had a message for Ottawa: 'We need more vaccines.'

Ontarioon Tuesday reported3,065 new cases of COVID-19 and eight additional deaths. According to a provincial update, hospitalizations stood at1,161, with 510 people listed as being in ICU "due to COVID-related illness."

At an earlier briefing Tuesday, Trudeau expressed concern about the pressures on health system capacity some provinces are facing.

"This isn't the news any of us wanted, but hospitalizations are surging. ICU beds are filling up," the prime minister said, noting that variants of concern are spreading.

"COVID-19 isn't done with us yet, and that means we all have to hold tight a little longer."

- From CBC News and The Canadian Press, last updated at 4:45 p.m. ET


What's happening elsewhere in Canada

As of 7:15p.m. ET on Tuesday, Canada had reported 1,020,900confirmed cases of COVID-19, with 60,299considered active. A CBC News tally of deaths stood at 23,141.

In Atlantic Canada,Nova Scotiareported six new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, andNew Brunswickreported three new cases.There were no new cases reported inPrince Edward IslandandNewfoundland and Labrador.

Quebecreported1,168 new cases of COVID-19 and four additional deaths on Tuesday. According to the provincial dashboard, hospitalizations stood at514, with 121 people in ICUs.

The province is tightening measures in red zones like the Montreal region, and in orange zones,Premier Franois Legaultannounced at a late afternoon briefing.

Starting Monday, high school students in Secondary 3, 4 and 5in red zones will attend class on alternating schedules once again, and extracurricular activities will stop. Gymsmust close, andhouses of worshipwill be limited to 25 people.

WATCH | 3rd wave renews pressure on hospitals:

In orange zones, elementary students will have to wear a mask at schooland houses of worship willbe limited to 100 people.

Across the North, there were no new cases reported inNunavut.Yukonand the Northwest Territorieshad not yet provided updated figures for the day.

In the Prairie provinces, Manitoba reported 62 new cases and two new deaths on Tuesday.

The province ispostponingthe opening of two dozen pop-up vaccination clinics in 18 communities next weekafter two shipments of Moderna vaccines were delayed.

Saskatchewan reported 217 new cases of COVID-19 and three additional deaths on Tuesday. There were 202 people in hospital with COVID-19-related illness, including 44 in ICUs, down slightly from the record high of 47 reported on Monday.

The province says nearly half of the new infections are in the Regina zone, where tighter public health measures are in place in a bid to slow the spread of the virus.

Saskatchewan on Tuesday also became the latest province to introduce a pandemic-affected 2021-22 budget, projecting a record deficit of $2.6 billion. It forecasted the province won't see a balanced budget until 2026-27.

InAlberta,Premier Jason Kenney is reinstating some public-health restrictions, saying that variant cases of COVID-19 continue to soar and are on track to swamp the health system by mid-May.

As of Friday, restaurants must close to in-person dining. Meanwhile,effective tonight at midnight,retail stores will be allowed 15 per cent customer capacity rather than the current 25 per cent, and team sports andgroup fitness are once again banned.

Alberta reported 931 new cases of COVID-19 and three additional deaths on Tuesday. Hospitalizations in the province stood at328, including76 people in intensive care.

WATCH | How Canada's approvedvaccines work:

3rd wave renews pressure on Canadas hospitals

3 years ago
Duration 1:49
The fast-spreading third wave of COVID-19 is making younger people sicker and its renewing the pressure on hospitals across the country.

InBritish Columbia, the province's online registration system for vaccine appointments opened to eligible adults on Tuesday morning.

Peopleborn in 1950 or earlier (age 71 and up)and those who are clinically extremely vulnerable are now able to register online to book their appointment, as are Indigenous people who are 18 and older.

Health officials reported1,068 new cases of COVID-19 and three additional deaths on Tuesday. The number of patients in hospital due to COVID-19 has risen to 328, including 96 who are in ICUs.

Much of the growing transmission that B.C. has seen is recent weeks can be linked to younger patients, who are increasingly ending up in intensive care, saidProvincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry.

Variants of concern are on the rise across Canada,sparking repeated calls from health officialstostick with public health measures aimed at slowing the spread of COVID-19. As of Tuesdayevening, a federal tracking site had recorded more than 16,100 variant cases, including:

  • 14,790cases of the B117 variant first reported in the U.K.
  • 337 cases of the B1351 variant first reported in South Africa.
  • 1,000 cases of the P1 variant first connected to travellers from Brazil.

- From The Canadian Press and CBC News, last updated at 7:15p.m. ET


What's happening around the world

Suez Canal captains receive a dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in Ismailia, Egypt. (Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters)

As of Tuesday afternoon, more than132million cases of COVID-19 had been reported worldwide, according to a case tracking tool maintained by U.S.-based Johns Hopkins University. The global death toll stood at more than 2.8 million.

The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday it is a travestythat some countries still have not had enough access to vaccines to begin inoculating health workers and the most vulnerable people against COVID-19.

"Scaling up production and equitable distribution remains the major barrier to ending the acute stage of the COVID-19 pandemic," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a news conference.

In theAmericas, U.S. President Joe Biden announced Tuesday that he's bumping up his deadline by two weeks for states to make all adults in thecountryeligible for coronavirus vaccines. But even as he expressed optimism about the pace of vaccinations, he warned Americans that the nation is not yet out of the woods.

"Let me be deadly earnest with you: We aren't at the finish line. We still have a lot of work to do. We're still in a life and death race against this virus," Biden said in remarks at the White House.

The president warned that "new variants of the virus are spreading and they're moving quickly. Cases are going back up, hospitalizations are no longer declining." He saidthepandemic "remains dangerous," and encouraged Americans to continue to wash their hands, physically distance and wear masks.

WATCH |Fears of 4th wave grow in the U.S.:

Which COVID-19 vaccine is better? (spoiler, theyre all good)

3 years ago
Duration 4:35
Dr. Samir Gupta explains how the four COVID-19 vaccines now approved in Canada work and why efficacy rates arent the most important number to look at.

Biden saidthat while his administration is on schedule to meet his new goal of distributing 200 million doses of the vaccine during his first 100 days, it will still take time for enough Americans to get vaccinated to slow the spread of the virus.But he expressed hope Tuesdaythat every adult will be eligible by April 19 to sign upfor vaccination. Some states already had begun moving up their deadlines from the original May 1 goal.

In New York, people 16 and older cansign up to bevaccinatedstarting Tuesday,a large expansion of eligibility after Gov. Andrew Cuomo opened eligibility to those 30 and olderlast week.

Those age 16 and 17 will be limited to receiving the Pfizer vaccine, since it is the only one authorized for use inpeople under 18. None of the available vaccines havebeen approved for people under 16.

Meanwhile, Colombiawill allow private imports of COVID-19 vaccines, the health ministry said on Monday, but the shots must be free for those being inoculated.

In Trinidad and Tobago, Prime Minister Keith Rowley has tested positive for the coronavirus, his office said Tuesday. Hewas tested after experiencing flu-like symptoms on Monday and isisolatingand under medical supervision, according to a government statement.

Election officers wear protective gear as they prepare for COVID-19 positive patients to cast their votes during the Tamil Nadu state assembly elections in Chennai, India, on Tuesday. (R. Parthibhan/The Associated Press)

In theAsia-Pacificregion, many Indian state leaders have asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi to open up vaccinations to most of the country's hundreds of millions of adults, following a second surge in infections that has eclipsed the first wave.

Australia on Tuesday said it had not yet received more than three million doses of previously promised AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine amid export curbs by the European Union, leaving a major hole in its early nationwide inoculation drive.

InAfrica, the World Bank estimates the continentwould need about $12 billion US to buy and distribute enoughCOVID-19 vaccinesto interrupt virus transmission, according to a new paper by the bank and the IMF.

InEurope,Spain is stepping up its vaccination drive, with Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez saying Tuesday that a steep rise in vaccine deliveries over the coming months will allow the country to inoculate 70 per centof its adult population some 33 million people by the end of August.

"The priority now, more than ever, is to vaccinate without respite," Sanchez told a news conference. "Vaccinate, vaccinate and vaccinate."

Spain's new COVID-19 infections have been edging higher in recent weeks. The 14-day cumulative incidence a key contagion metric rose Monday to 163 cases per 100,000 people, up from 149 a week earlier. The country expects to receive 87 million doses by September.

Hungary will begin gradually easing restrictions within days, as it expects to have 25 per centof its population of 10 million inoculated by Tuesday or early Wednesday.

In theMiddle East, Turkey reported a record high of 49,685 confirmed single-day cases on Tuesday. The number of daily deaths also reached the highest level this year, with 211 confirmed in the past 24 hours.

Pfizer said on Monday it was working on a new deal to supply COVID-19 vaccines to Israel after an initial supply agreement forged in late 2020 ended.

- From The Associated Press and Reuters, last updated at 7p.m. ET

With files from The Associated Press, The Canadian Press and Reuters

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