OTTAWA Ottawa Public Health is reporting 63 new cases of COVID-19 in Ottawa on Friday, the eighth straight day with fewer than 100 new cases of COVID-19 in the capital. Two more Ottawa residents have died due to COVID-19. Since the first case of COVID-19 on March 11, there have been 13,216 laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ottawa, including 422 deaths. Ottawa s key COVID-19 indicators continued to show positive signs on Friday. Ottawa s positivity rate fell to 2.4 per cent for the period of Jan. 22 to 28, while the cases per 100,000 fell to 44.0 Across Ontario, there were 1,837 new cases of COVID-19. Public Health Ontario reported 595 new cases in Toronto, 295 in Peel Region and 170 in York Region.
OTTAWA One day after seeing its lowest daily case count in six weeks, Ottawa is seeing an uptick in the daily number of new COVID-19 cases in the city. However, trends including the number of active cases and the weekly average of cases per capita continue to improve. The testing positivity rate has also dropped below three per cent. Ottawa Public Health said 72 more people in the city have tested positive for COVID-19. No new deaths were reported in Ottawa on Wednesday, leaving the city s pandemic death toll at 420 residents.
1,670 new cases were reported across Ontario on Wednesday, the province s lowest daily case count in two months. The province also reported 49 new deaths and 2,725 new resolved cases provincewide.
Divorce: My abusive husband took away almost all my savings and even got me into a large debt
I married more than a decade ago and my partner has been physically, verbally and financially abusive to me.
He took away almost all my savings and got me into a large debt.
He has been taking money from me on and off all the time but it s been much more extreme in the past few years and he repaid very little.
For example, he made me take out a loan for tens of thousands of pounds in September last year and has paid the EMI [equated monthly instalment] for a few months and stopped.
Childcare waiting lists in Northern BC extended by lack of Early Childhood Educators
SHARE ON: Child Drawing (Photo by Pixabay)
Canadian childcare services continue to battle the short supply of Early Childhood Educators (ECE) in the country, and Northern BC is no exception.
Some parents of young children in Prince George are even facing a two-year waitlist for daycare service.
“It’s really stressful to find enough people to cover the work especially during COVID when somebody is getting tested you can be short-staffed for up to a week,” explained Lynette Mikalishen, Director of Child Care Services at the YMCA of Northern BC.