Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Wednesday, Feb. 17 - Action News
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Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Wednesday, Feb. 17

Alberta reported 277 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday and seven more deaths from the illness. Across the province, 370 patients are being treated in hospitals for the disease, including 60 in ICU beds.

Alberta reported 277 new COVID-19 cases, seven more deaths from illness

Alberta Health data shows that new daily cases peaked in the province on Dec. 4 with 1,874. By Feb. 17, new daily cases had dropped to 277. (Alberta Health Services)

The latest:

  • Alberta reported277 new casesof COVID-19 on Wednesday, compared with 263 new casesreported Tuesday.
  • There were 4,857active cases on Wednesday, downfrom4,993the previous day.
  • The testingpositivity rate is 3.9per cent, down from 5 per centthe previous day.
  • Seven more people have died,bringing the total number of deaths in the province to1,798.
  • There are370people in hospital as of Wednesday, including 60in intensive care.
  • The provincewide R-value, which refers to the average number of people infected by each person with the virus, was 0.85, which did not change from the previous day.
  • Alberta Health data shows that new daily cases peaked in the province on Dec. 4 with 1,874. By Feb. 16, the latest update available, new daily cases had dropped to 277. The last time that number was so small was on Oct. 17.
  • As of Wednesday, the province hasconfirmed a total of 225 cases of people infected withthe coronavirus variants 218of the strain first identified in the U.K. and seven of the strain first identified in South Africa.
  • Roughly half of the cases that have been fully investigated have been found to be linked to travel. Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta's chief medical officer of health, says that's a concern because it means the other halfare considered community acquired anda third of themhave an unknown source.
  • Alberta Health told CBC News that nineschools have had a case of someone with the variant attending while infectious and three schools have had in-school transmission.
  • As of Tuesday, 152,056doses of the vaccine had been administered. There are now approximately 56,594 Albertans who are fully immunized after receiving both doses.
  • Hinshaw said on Wednesday there has been an increase inAlbertans who aren't participating inthe contact tracing process. So far for February, 1.3 per cent of confirmed cases didnot answer or return calls.
  • Hinshawsaid Tuesday she has been hearing a lot of questions around capacity limits at restaurants. She explained that, unlike other public settings, such as retail stores, Alberta has not implemented specific capacity limits on restaurants, bars and lounges.
  • Instead, the province has putin place physical-distancing rules that require a minimum oftwo-metres between tables. "In addition, we have limited the number of people in a dining party who can be seated at the same table to a maximum of six. And these must be members of the same household or an individualliving alone with their two contacts."
  • The Alberta government is making an additional $10,000 available to small- and medium-sized businessesthat have seen severe revenue drops because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Premier Jason Kenney and Jobs, Economy and Innovation Minister Doug Schweitzer will make an announcement Wednesday afternoon that $120 million is being set aside to supplementexisting supportsfor enterprises.
  • The Olymel slaughterhouse plant in Red Deer willtemporarily shut down due to arapidly growing COVID-19 outbreak at the facility, the company said Monday.
  • Alberta's chief medical officer of health said Tuesdaythe provincechose not to shut down the slaughterhouse because for months the company had been successfully managing the outbreak.
  • Darwin Doloque, 35, died of COVID-19 on Jan. 28 after contracting the virus in the outbreak at theslaughterhouse.
  • As ofMonday, 326 employees at the plant had tested positive for COVID-19, nearly double the count of 168 on Feb. 6. Of those,192 remain active.
  • Labour leaders gathered outside the plant Wednesday morning to draw attention to the issue of worker safety. "Theprovince is on notice that we expect them to do more to keep workers safe in facilities like this and in other facilities across the province," saidGil McGowan, president of the Alberta Federation of Labour.
  • Calgary police say a video showing an officer shaking the hand of an unmasked, anti-mask protester on Saturdaycaptured the end of a peaceful negotiation with no day-of enforcement despite a number of people breaking Public Health Act rules.
  • The incident happenedas dozens of unmasked protesters walked through Chinook Centre to protest public health restrictions in place to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
  • Some experts fear a continued lack of consequences for some protesting essential measures could cripple the province's pandemic response."That sends a message to the community that these rules aren't important, that perhaps we are safe without following these rules and we're not,"said Dr. Tehseen Ladha, an assistant professor in pediatrics at the University of Alberta.
  • Air travellers landing in Canada will have to quarantine in a hotel, at their own expense, starting Feb. 22for up to 72 hours, according to government sources who spoke with CBC News, with an announcement expected later Friday. Last month, the federal government announced air travellers returning from non-essential trips abroad will have to isolate in a federally mandated facility for up to three dayswhile they await the results of a polymerase chain reaction test, commonly known as aPCR test, at an estimated cost of up to $2,000.
  • The hotel stay would be part of themandatory 14-day quarantine period for returning non-essential travellers.
  • The tighter federal restrictions and the growing spread of more highly contagious variant strains of coronavirus in other parts of the world, prompted theAlberta government to say Thursday that it wouldsuspend the border testing pilot at the Calgary airportwhen the newrequirements come into effect.
  • Starting Monday, all travellersarriving atland border crossings arerequiredto show proof of a negative PCR test completed in the United States within the previous 72 hours in line with new federal rules.
  • Border officers can't legally deny entry to Canadians, but those who show up without proof of a test could face fines of up to $3,000.
(Evelyne Asselin/CBC)

See the detailed regional breakdown:

Here is thedetailed regional breakdownof active cases as of Wednesday.

  • Calgary zone: 1,823, down from 1,887 reported on Wednesday (47,410recovered).
  • Edmonton zone: 1,270, down from 1,333 (50,647recovered).
  • North zone: 719, down from 737 (10,126recovered).
  • South zone: 338, downfrom 344 (5,830recovered).
  • Central zone: 697, up from 679 (8,844recovered).
  • Unknown: 10, down from 13(103recovered).

Find out which neighbourhoods or communities have the most cases, how hard people of different ages have been hit, the ages of people in hospital, how Alberta compares to other provinces and more in: Here are the latest COVID-19 statistics for Alberta and what they mean

Here are the latest Alberta COVID-19 stories:


Increase in Albertansnot participating in contact tracing process

Since last fall, Alberta Health Services has increased its capacity to do contact tracing, Hinshaw said.

Until December, less than one per cent of confirmed cases didn't answer the phone or return calls from contact tracers.

But since then, the province has seen a "concerning" rise in such incidents, Hinshaw said, and in January tracers had problems contactingpeople in about two per cent of positive cases. So far in February, tracers have encountered that problem in about 1.3 per cent of cases.

"Contact tracing remains essential to our ability to keep Albertans healthy and to keep driving our cases downward," she said. "To be successful in containing COVID spread, contact tracing relies on a partnership with Albertans who test positive or who have been exposed to COVID-19.

"Unfortunately, recently, we have seen a small but significant increase in the number of people who aren't participating with the contact tracing process. It may betempting to think thatnot providing information will make COVID go away. Unfortunately,the opposite is true."

For more, see:Alberta reports 277 new COVID-19 cases, seven more deaths from illness


Alberta adds $120 million in pandemic supports for struggling businesses

The Alberta government is making an additional $10,000 available to small- and medium-sized businessesthat have seen severe revenue drops because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Premier Jason Kenney and Jobs, Economy and Innovation Minister Doug Schweitzer announced Wednesday afternoon that $120 million is being set aside to supplementexisting supportsfor enterprises.

Businesses that show a 60 per cent reduction in revenue will be eligible to be granted 15 per cent of their typical monthly income, up to a maximum of $10,000. Applications for a piece of that funding will open in April.

The support is available to companies with fewer than 500 employees and does not need to be repaid. The province says the money can be used for things like covering the cost of personal protective equipment, paying rent or staff salaries.

"We know that many Alberta small businesses and job creators will still need helpfor the foreseeable future," Kenney said on Wednesday.

"Until we get enough vaccines from the federal government and we're able to move forward safely, Alberta's government will be there for those businesses and their employees, every step of the way."

For more, see:Alberta adds $120 million in pandemic supports for struggling businesses


Alberta's increase in COVID-19 variants points to need for asymptomatic testing, Calgary doctor says

The number of coronavirus variant cases confirmed in Alberta has reached221, and roughly half of the cases that have been fully investigated have been found to be linked to travel.

Alberta's chief medical officer of health,Dr.Deena Hinshaw,said at a press conference on Tuesday that she'sparticularly concerned about the growing number of cases that are not linked to travel.

She says those cases are considered community acquired and that a third of themhave an unknown source.

Dr. Vanessa Meier-Stephenson, an infectious disease physician with the University of Calgary, says she fully expectsthere arecases of the variant they're not detecting.

"When we start seeing some of the transmission in the community and when we're seeing transmission that we can't link back to a specific source, it does raise increasing concerns around how this is spreading in the community," she said.

Meier-Stephenson says there are still many questions about the variants including how long people are infectious.

"Ourgovernment and our public health officials are doing what they can to kind of develop plans around this. But sometimes with a lot of these unknowns entering into the equation, it doesmake it more challenging for them to make informed decisions, such as opening up various facilities and steps," she said.

This is why Meier-Stephenson says she would like to see a return to more widespread asymptomatic testing something the province cancelled in the fall.

For more, see:Alberta's increase in COVID-19 variants points to need for asymptomatic testing, Calgary doctor says


Alberta didn't shut down slaughterhouse because it had been 'successful' in managing outbreak

Alberta's chief medical officer of health says the provincechose not to shut down a slaughterhouse after weeks of growing cases and one worker death, because for months the company had been successfully managing the outbreak.

On Monday, Quebec-based Olymel voluntarily closed its Red Deer, Alta., pork processing plant. It saidthat due to the growing outbreak it could no longer manage operations in a safe and efficient manner. It was an abrupt change of position, telling CBC News hours earlier it had planned to remain open.

Alberta Health Services and Occupational Health and Safety were not involved in that decision, and both had approved the plant to continue operating.

As of Tuesday, there were 343 cases of COVID-19 linked to the current outbreak, 200 of which were active.

Darwin Doloque, 35, died after contracting COVID-19 through his work at the Olymel pork plant in Red Deer, Alta.
Darwin Doloque, 35, died after contracting COVID-19 through his work at the Olymel pork plant in Red Deer, Alta. (GoFundMe, CBC)

On Jan. 28 more than two weeks ago Darwin Doloque, a 35-year-old employee at the plant,died of COVID-19 linked to the workplace outbreak.

"It's important to remember this particular plant has had sporadic cases, one or two at a time, for several months, and the processes that had been put in place at the plant site had been very successful in reducing spread,"Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta's chief medical officer of health, said Tuesday.

Formore, see:Alberta didn't shut down slaughterhouse because it had been 'successful' in managing outbreak


One week after restrictions eased, Alberta reports 263 new COVID-19 cases

Alberta eased some restrictions a week ago, but it'stoo early to say what impact those changes are having, said Dr. DeenaHinshaw, chief medical officer of health.

Evidence shows that social gatheringsare responsible thehighest rates of transmission, she said, noting the provincesaw its lastspikes following Thanksgiving and Halloween holiday season get-togethers.

"This sacrifice [the restrictionon gatherings] has had the biggest impact on reducing spread in the province, relieving the pressure on the health-care system and getting us to the point that we are at today," Hinshaw said.

"We cannot become complacent now, especially with the arrival of variants of concern in our province."

Restriction staying where they are, Dr. Deena Hinshaw says

4 years ago
Duration 3:25
One week after some restrictions were eased in Alberta, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, the provinces chief medical officer, explains that with the incubation period of COVID-19, it is too soon to see the impacts of those changes.

Provincial labs completed 5,216 tests on Monday, with a positivity rate of about five per cent, which is higher than in previous days.

"This is an increase fromwhere we have been in the past few weeks, which is concerning," Hinshaw said of that rate. "It is possible this increase is because of changes in who went for testing over the long weekend. So we will be watching closely in the days to come to see if this is an isolated finding or a concerning trend."

The province now has a total of 221 cases of two faster-spreadingvariant strains of the virus. Of those cases, 214 arethe B117 variant first identified in the United Kingdom and seven are the variant first detected in South Africa.

"I know that many Albertans are concerned about these variants, andI am, too,"Hinshawsaid Tuesday at anews conference.

"I am particularly concerned about thegrowing number of cases that are not linked to travel. Though many of these cases are the results of close contacts that we have identified through robust contact tracing."

For more, see:One week after restrictions eased, Alberta reports 263 new COVID-19 cases


Calgary police say officer shook anti-masker's hand for agreeing to peacefully end protest

Calgary police say a video showing an officer shaking the hand of an unmasked, anti-mask protester captured the end of a peaceful negotiation with no day-of enforcement despite a number of people breaking Public Health Act rules.

On Saturday, dozens of unmasked protesters walked through Chinook Centre to protest public health restrictions in place to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Videos of the event posted to social media show police officers escorting the protesters, and one officer shaking an unmaskedprotester's hand and leaning in close, with an arm around the man's shoulder,as the two converse.

Police said in a release on Monday evening that members from its public safety unit, beat teams and diversity resources team were in attendance, and that the diversity resources team negotiated with the protesters to ensure they left the mall peacefully.

Calgary police defend exchange at anti-mask rally

4 years ago
Duration 3:12
Calgary police said a video showing an officer shaking the hand of an anti-mask protester captured the end of a peaceful negotiation. They are committed to investigating the full scope of the protest, although no tickets were issued on the day.

"At the end of this negotiation, a handshake was offered and accepted. Another protester was nearby speaking into a bullhorn so the officer leaned in closer to hear what is being said," police said.

Shortly after, the protesters left the mall, police said.

"Our role at demonstrations such as these is to ensure public and officer safety, and for this reason, it is sometimes better to follow through with enforcement action post event. We commit to investigating the full scope of events in the coming days to determine what enforcement action may be taken."

For more, see:Calgary police say officer shook anti-masker's hand for agreeing to peacefully end protest


Perceived lack of enforcement is splintering public will to follow health measures, experts fear

Alberta's race against coronavirus variants in the coming months depends on the public's ability to follow public health rules, but some experts fear a continued lack of consequences for some protesting essential measures could cripple the province's pandemic response.

There are seemingly weekly examples ofAlbertans defying public health rules by marching unmasked through malls, worshipping at over-capacity church services and walking out on mandatory hotel quarantine. All without any apparent consequences, apart from a handful of tickets.

Some experts told CBCNews that allowing these demonstrations to continue is dangerous.It can erode faith that these measures are necessary, and discourage compliance which, in turn, hampers the province's ability to fight the pandemic.

Especiallyas more transmissible COVID-19 variants threaten the gains Alberta has made to bring down case numbers in recent weeks.

"If the enforcement is simply going to be something symbolic or a token ... but doesn't actually preventfuture such transgressions or deter a group or people from doing this again, then that's not going to be effective," said Dr. Tehseen Ladha, an assistant professor in pediatrics at the University of Alberta.

For more, see: Perceived lack of enforcement is splintering public will to follow health measures, experts fear


  • For the latest on what's happening in the rest of Canada and around the world, seehere.

With files from The Canadian Press