positive - Bad Sporters https://www.badsporters.com News Blogging About Athletes Being Caught Up Wed, 24 Jun 2020 21:41:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Several players and staff members on the Toronto Blue Jays have tested positive ; Windsor-Essex gets green light to go to Stage 2; Ferry service to Toronto Islands resumes Saturday https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/24/several-players-and-staff-members-on-the-toronto-blue-jays-have-tested-positive-windsor-essex-gets-green-light-to-go-to-stage-2-ferry-service-to-toronto-islands-resumes-saturday/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/24/several-players-and-staff-members-on-the-toronto-blue-jays-have-tested-positive-windsor-essex-gets-green-light-to-go-to-stage-2-ferry-service-to-toronto-islands-resumes-saturday/#respond Wed, 24 Jun 2020 21:41:36 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=7673 Several players and staff members on the Toronto Blue Jays have tested positive ; Windsor-Essex gets green light to go to Stage 2; Ferry service to Toronto Islands resumes Saturday | The Star “,”heading”:””,”fullWindow”:false,”fullBleed”:false,”showFullBleedOnMobile”:false,”headColor”:””,”type”:”html5mobile”,”textColor”:””,”mobileImageUrl”:””,”bgColor”:””,”imageUrl”:””,”registeredOnly”:false,”linkUrl”:””,”internalScroll”:false,”displayStyle”:”small-up”},”text”:”Read the full story from the Star’s Steve McKinley.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”12:27 p.m.: Quebec is reporting 17 new deaths related to the COVID-19 pandemic, including […]

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Several players and staff members on the Toronto Blue Jays have tested positive ; Windsor-Essex gets green light to go to Stage 2; Ferry service to Toronto Islands resumes Saturday | The Star

“,”heading”:””,”fullWindow”:false,”fullBleed”:false,”showFullBleedOnMobile”:false,”headColor”:””,”type”:”html5mobile”,”textColor”:””,”mobileImageUrl”:””,”bgColor”:””,”imageUrl”:””,”registeredOnly”:false,”linkUrl”:””,”internalScroll”:false,”displayStyle”:”small-up”},”text”:”Read the full story from the Star’s Steve McKinley.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”12:27 p.m.: Quebec is reporting 17 new deaths related to the COVID-19 pandemic, including 11 in the last 24 hours. There were also 53 new cases, for a total of 54,937.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”There are 500 people in hospital, down 15 from the previous day. Of those, 52 are in intensive care.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The province also announced today it would cease providing daily updates as of Friday, in favour of once-a-week updates every Thursday.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”A total of 5,441 people have died from the novel coronavirus in Quebec, and 23,710 have recovered.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”12:20 p.m. (updated): Florida’s Department of Health on Wednesday confirmed 5,508 additional cases of COVID-19, setting another daily total record high since the start of the pandemic. The state now has a total of 109,014 confirmed cases.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”snippet”:” “,”heading”:””,”fullWindow”:false,”fullBleed”:false,”showFullBleedOnMobile”:false,”headColor”:””,”type”:”html5mobile”,”textColor”:””,”mobileImageUrl”:””,”bgColor”:””,”imageUrl”:””,”registeredOnly”:false,”linkUrl”:””,”internalScroll”:false,”displayStyle”:”small-up”,”text”:”Previously, the highest daily total of newly confirmed cases was on Saturday, with 4,049 cases. There were also 44 new deaths announced Wednesday, raising the statewide death toll to 3,281.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Less than half of the new cases were in South Florida. It is still unclear if any of the new deaths were in South Florida.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”On Tuesday, Miami-Dade hospitalizations hit an all-time high for the second day in a row with 818 patients, according to Miami-Dade County’s “New Normal” dashboard data. According to Tuesday’s data, 108 people were discharged and 114 people were admitted.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”While a record number of COVID-19 patients are filling Miami-Dade hospitals, with one medical center in Homestead reaching ICU capacity on Tuesday, hospitals countywide say they still have more beds available than beds filled with COVID-19 patients.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Hospital administrators say there is also a silver lining in the growing number of new cases and hospitalizations in Florida’s hardest-hit county: The patients are younger and not as severely ill as they were during the first wave in April, and doctors and nurses have gained valuable experience in the months-long pandemic — leading to shorter hospital stays and better outcomes.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Scientists are also still working to learn more about the virus, including how many people in the community are infected and have mild or no symptoms, which can make it difficult to determine what percentage of the cases hospitalizations represent.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”10:52 a.m.: Ontario has extended its state of emergency to July 15.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Premier Doug Ford has said he is hopeful that will be the last extension of the emergency declaration. The motion passed the legislature this morning.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Many of the emergency orders made under the state of emergency are expected to continue even after July 15, including bans on large gatherings.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”After the state of emergency expires, the province won’t be able to make new emergency orders, amend them, or re-enact old ones, but existing ones can be extended.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Local medical officers of health will still have certain powers under the Health Protection and Promotion Act, which is what some have used to require masks in commercial establishments.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Read the full story from the Star’s Rob Ferguson and Robert Benzie. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”snippet”:”n”,”heading”:””,”fullWindow”:false,”fullBleed”:false,”showFullBleedOnMobile”:false,”headColor”:””,”type”:”html5mobile”,”textColor”:””,”mobileImageUrl”:””,”bgColor”:””,”imageUrl”:””,”registeredOnly”:false,”linkUrl”:””,”internalScroll”:false,”displayStyle”:”small-up”,”text”:”10:37 a.m.: The Toronto International Film Festival has announced plans for this year’s annual movie marathon, which will include both physical and digital screenings, virtual red carpets and drive-ins.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The festival’s 45th edition is slated to run Sept. 10-19 and has been reimagined to follow the protocols set by authorities to avoid the spread of COVID-19.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Organizers say the 10-day event will have a lineup of 50 new feature films, five programs of shorts and an online industry conference.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”It will also have outdoor experiences, press conferences, interactive talks, and Q-and-As with cast and filmmakers.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”TIFF didn’t provide specific details on how such events will unfold, but it’s clear this will be a much different festival than the usual extravaganza of hundreds of films and a city crawling with stars, cinephiles and celebrity watchers.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The films include Francis Lee’s “Ammonite,” starring Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan, Halle Berry’s directorial debut “Bruised,” and “Concrete Cowboy” by Ricky Staub, starring Idris Elba, Jharrel Jerome, and Lorraine Toussaint.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”10:35 a.m.: The New York City Marathon, the world’s largest marathon and one of the city’s biggest annual spectacles, has been cancelled this year as concerns about the spread of the coronavirus continue to dash hopes of holding large-scale events, organizers announced Wednesday.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The race, one of the most prestigious and lucrative events of its kind, would have celebrated its 50th anniversary in November. It is one of the highlights of fall in New York and on the endurance sports calendar, attracting more than 50,000 runners, 10,000 volunteers and roughly one million fans, who line nearly every accessible yard of the 42.1-km course through the five boroughs.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”City officials and New York Road Runners, which owns and organizes the event, decided holding the race would be too risky. Public health experts have said mass events, especially those that bring people together from across the globe, will remain a danger until a treatment or a vaccine for COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, is widely available.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”With the announcement, New York became the third of the six major international marathons to be canceled in 2020.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”10:30 a.m.: The Toronto International Film Festival will go ahead Sept. 10-19 but will be much smaller, with a lineup of 50 new feature films, five programs of short films, virtual red carpets, press conferences and industry talks. as well as interactive talks.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”10 a.m.: The COVID-19 outbreak has sparked “an ugly ticketing pandemic” rife with racial profiling by overzealous enforcement officers, a new Canadian Civil Liberties Association report finds.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”In a 37-page study entitled “Stay Off The Grass: COVID-19 and Law Enforcement in Canada,” the rights watchdog calculates 10,000 tickets were issued between April 1 and June 15.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Read the full story from the Star’s Robert Benzie.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”8:10 a.m. (updated): Modified ferry service to the Toronto Islands will resume Saturday, Mayor John Tory announced Wednesday morning.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”type”:”cta”,”buttonText”:”Sign Up Now”,”buttonLink”:”/emails.html?nsrc=article-inline-covid”,”description”:”Never miss the latest news from the Star, including up-to-date coronavirus coverage, with our email newsletters”,”title”:”Get the latest in your inbox”,”text”:”Ferries will operate at 50 per cent capacity, Tory told reporters at a news conference at Jack Layton Ferry Terminal.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Passengers will be required to bring their own masks and wear them on the boat. Visitors are being urged to buy their ferry tickets in advance online at www.toronto.ca/ferry — only 5,000 tickets a day will be sold. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Passengers are also urged to plan a visit at non-peak hours if possible — 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. are the busiest times.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Only one ferry had been operating during the COVID-19 lockdown, principally for the 700 residents of the islands.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”While washrooms on the islands will be open, Centreville Amusement Park and play structures on the islands will remain closed.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Ferry tickets must be purchased ahead of time online and are only valid for the date selected at the time of purchase. Additional staff will be on hand at the ferry terminal to assist visitors with these new requirements.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Read the full story from the Star’s Francine Kopun.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”7:28 a.m. Oxford University said testing for coronavirus infection could become quicker and more accurate, following the launch of a multicenter national program of research to evaluate how new diagnostic tests perform in hospitals, general practices and care homes.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The COVID-19 National DiagnOstic Research and Evaluation Platform, or CONDOR, will create a single national route for evaluating new diagnostic tests in hospitals and in community healthcare settings, according to a statement on the university’s website on Tuesday morning.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The research program seeks to bring together experts who are “highly experienced in evaluating diagnostic tests and generating the robust evidence required” for a test to be used in the U.K.’s National Health Service statement.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Jointly led by the University of Oxford and the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, the program will put the many tests developed by the life sciences industry to either detect current coronavirus infection or to find out if someone has previously been infected through their paces in hospital, general practice, and care home environments.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”7:26 a.m.: New virus cases declined Wednesday in China and its capital, Beijing, where a roughly two-week spike appears to be firmly on the wane.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”A total of 12 cases were reported nationwide, compared to 22 the day before. Beijing had seven cases, down from 13. There were two cases in neighbouring Hebei province and three that were brought in from abroad.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”No new deaths were reported and 359 people remained in treatment for COVID-19, with another 118 in monitoring and isolation for testing positive while showing no symptoms or for being suspected cases.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”China has reported 4,634 deaths from 83,430 cases since the virus was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Beijing’s ongoing outbreak has topped 250 cases, virtually all linked to the city’s biggest wholesale market, and led to lockdowns of some neighbourhoods and the closing of recently re-opened schools.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”7 a.m.: Sicily’s governor says 28 migrants who were rescued at sea have tested positive for the coronavirus, confirming a new complication in Italy’s efforts to manage waves of migrants smuggled across the Mediterranean from Africa.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The migrants were being held on a ship off Porto Empedocle where they’re taken to quarantine after being rescued.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Sicily Governor Nello Musumeci said in a Facebook post Wednesday that the positive tests confirmed that he was right to demand special at-sea quarantine measures for migrants to prevent new clusters from forming in Italy, the onetime European epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The positive tests come as an Italian parliamentary commission is visiting Porto Empedocle precisely to check on migrant and health care issues.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”type”:”relatedStories”,”relatedStories”:[],”text”:”Summertime has traditionally been peak season for migrant smugglers operating in lawless Libya, and officials have predicted an increase in efforts to reach Europe with the easing of the health emergency in Italy and the resumption of activities of humanitarian rescue ships in the Mediterranean.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”6:10 a.m.: You can finally get a haircut, eat at a restaurant patio, or visit malls in Toronto and Peel Region for the first time in 13 weeks on Wednesday as they join the majority of Ontario in entering Stage 2 of the province’s reopening plan. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The province announced Monday that more businesses and services will be allowed to open with appropriate public health measures in place. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Restaurants and bars will be open for delivery, takeout and outdoor dining only, according to the City of Toronto. Shopping malls will be open, but you’ll have to go elsewhere to enjoy the food court as dining spaces will be prohibited. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Personal care services like barber shops, hair styling, nails, tattoos and esthetic services will be allowed to open. Though you will have to hold off on face-related pampering like facials and beard trims a while longer. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Recreational and cultural spaces are also allowed to reopen, including water recreational services like indoor and outdoor swimming pools and splash pads. Community centres will reopen for “a very limited number of modified uses,” the City says, including certain outdoor sports and recreational activities. Campgrounds, museums, galleries, aquariums, zoos and heritage institutions are also reopening. As are libraries with limited on-site services, film and television production, tours and guide services.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”6:05 a.m.: New coronavirus cases in the U.S. have surged to their highest level in two months and are now back to where they were at the peak of the outbreak.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The U.S. on Tuesday reported 34,700 new cases of the virus, according to a tally compiled by Johns Hopkins University that was published Wednesday. There have been only two previous days that the U.S. has reported more cases: April 9 and April 24, when a record 36,400 cases were logged.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”New cases in the U.S. have been surging for more than a week after trending down for more than six weeks. While early hot spots like New York and New Jersey have seen cases steadily decrease, the virus has been hitting the south and west. Several states on Tuesday set single-day records, including Arizona, California, Mississippi, Nevada and Texas.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Cases were also surging in other parts of the world. India reported a record daily increase of nearly 16,000 new cases. Mexico, where testing rates have been low, also set a record with more than 6,200 new cases.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”But China appears to have tamed a new outbreak of the virus in Beijing, once again demonstrating its ability to quickly mobilize vast resources by testing nearly 2.5 million people in 11 days. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Tuesday 7 p.m.: The owner of a farm where some 199 migrant workers have tested positive for COVID-19 says his operation assiduously followed public health guidelines to prevent an outbreak, and has previously been lauded for providing quality accommodation to migrant workers.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”In an interview with the Star on Tuesday, Scotlynn Growers president Scott Biddle said the local health department has “always used us as an example for what other farmers should be doing.””,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”“We’re building housing for another hundred men this year,” Biddle told the Star, adding that the new accommodation will be larger than what’s currently required by Health Canada to account for any changes to federally-mandated housing standards.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”The comments come after a Star investigation revealed a history of complaints at Scotlynn by Mexican migrant workers about substandard housing and other concerns.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”In reports to the Mexican Ministry of Labour between 2016 and 2018, workers described overcrowded bunkhouses, bedbug infestations, and sometimes failure to receive timely medical attention. Scotlynn received 33 complaints over the two year period, the highest number of any Canadian farm. “,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”On Saturday, 55-year-old father of four Juan López Chaparro, who worked at Scotlynn, died after fighting COVID-19 for three weeks.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Read the full story from Sara Mojtehedzadeh here.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Tuesday 6:50 p.m.: Canada could avoid a second wave of the coronavirus if it learns the lessons of South Korea and Taiwan and attacks testing, tracing and treatment of COVID-19 cases and practices “dynamic distancing” from the get-go, MPs heard Tuesday.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”That means as the economy reopens, communities must be ready to reimpose physical distancing and socially restrictive measures periodically with surges in disease activity in order to contain outbreaks and allow economic revitalization to continue, Asaph Young Chun, head of Korea’s Statistics Research Institute, told the Commons health committee.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Those “nonpharmaceutical” interventions are the best “exit strategy” from the COVID-19 lockdowns, he said.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Two American health experts said South Korea and Taiwan showed the path for other countries to follow, but they warned Canada against reopening too quickly even to its neighbours, the United States.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”Read the full story from Tonda MacCharles here.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”text”:”-“,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”type”:”textBreakPoint”,”insertAt”:”contentEndBreakPoint”,”text”:”Click here for more news from Tuesday.”,”type”:”text”,”isParagraph”:true,”type”:”shareBar”,”type”:”trustbar”],”assetTags”:[“smg_canada”,”covid_updates”,”covid_19″,”coronavirus”,”canada”,”bn1″,”covid”,”kmi2″,”smg2_news”,”coronarolling”,”coronafree”],”seoKeywords”:”coronavirus,COVID-19,covid,Canada,coronarolling,coronafree,covid updates,BN1,KMI2,smg_canada,smg2_news”,”excludeInRecommendations”:false,”promo”:[],”related”:”pubdays”:0,”strategy”:0,”speciallabel”:”name”:”Free Digital Access”,”seoHead”:”Several players and staff members on the Toronto Blue Jays have tested positive ; Windsor-Essex gets green light to go to Stage 2; Ferry service to Toronto Islands resumes Saturday”,”headline”:”Several players and staff members on the Toronto Blue Jays have tested positive ; Windsor-Essex gets green light to go to Stage 2; Ferry service to Toronto Islands resumes Saturday”,”subheadline”:”New coronavirus cases in the U.S. have surged to their highest level in two months and back to where they were at the outbreak’s peak.”,”removeInterestedInFlag”:true,”canonicalUrl”:”https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2020/06/24/coronavirus-covid-19-updates-canada-toronto-gta-june-24.html”,”seoDescription”:”New coronavirus cases in the U.S. have surged to their highest level in two months and back to where they were at the outbreak’s peak.”,”storytag”:”Updated”,”publishedepoch”:1592993700000,”lastmodifiedepoch”:1593030801419,”abstractVisible”:false,”relatedLinks”:[],”paywallMode”:”outofwall”,”storyuuid”:”3c2d12e7-a05a-4295-9ff7-50ff70848dad”,”republish”:true,”slideshowid”:”B881171393Z.1″,”lastmodified”:”06 24 2020″,”lastreplicated”:”4:33 PM, Wed., June 24, 2020″,”readtime”:13,”breadcrumbs”:[“label”:”News”,”relurl”:”/news”,”url”:”https://www.thestar.com/content/thestar/news.html”,”label”:”Canada”,”relurl”:”/news/canada”,”url”:”https://www.thestar.com/content/thestar/news/canada.html”],”authors”:[“author”:”Star staff”,”photo”:,”author”:”wire services”,”photo”:],”paywall”:true,”ogUrlMetatag”:”https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2020/06/24/coronavirus-covid-19-updates-canada-toronto-gta-june-24.html”,”numOfParagraphs”:100,”liftigImage”:”captionPosition”:”overlay”,”fullWindowMainart”:false,”type”:”image”,”imageid”:”GL2VSID8.3″,”origImageSize”:”1200×800″,”cropthumb”:”0,0,1200,800″,”lastmodified”:1593030801684,”forceoriginal”:false,”caption”:”Queen West Barber Shop is cutting hair again as Toronto joins the rest of Ontario in phase two of reopening during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto. 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Queen West Barber Shop is cutting hair again as Toronto joins the rest of Ontario in phase two of reopening during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto. June 24, 2020.

The latest coronavirus news from Canada and around the world Wednesday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.

4:25 p.m.: WestJet Airlines Ltd. says it will lay off 3,333 employees as part of major restructuring amid the coronavirus pandemic that has devastated the travel industry.

The company says it will consolidate call centre activity in Alberta, restructure its office and management staff and contract out operations at all but four of the 38 Canadian airports where it operates.

3:45 p.m. : Several players and staff members on the Toronto Blue Jays have tested positive for COVID-19, a source has told The Canadian Press.

The source spoke on condition of anonymity because the team has not officially announced the positive cases.

The developments come a week before the start of training camp ahead of a recently approved 60-game regular season. The Blue Jays shut down their spring training complex last Friday in Dunedin, Fla., after a player presented symptoms consistent with the virus.

2:39 p.m.: Manitoba RCMP say they’ve been called for a second time this month because an airline passenger was not wearing a mask while flying.

The Mounties say they responded to a report Monday night of an unruly passenger on a flight from Vancouver to Winnipeg, and were told that the man had refused directions to wear a protective mask.

They say a 39-year-old Winnipeg man is facing a charge of refusing to comply with flight crew instructions, which carries a maximum fine of $5,000.

On June 14, a flight from Vancouver to Toronto was diverted to Winnipeg due to an alleged unruly passenger.

RCMP said a 60-year-old man from Surrey, B.C. was charged after lighting a cigarette during the flight and refusing to wear a mask.

The accused in that case was remanded in custody on charges including mischief, smoking onboard an aircraft and refusing to comply with flight crew instructions.

1:36 p.m.: Most of the region of Windsor-Essex will be allowed to move into Stage 2 of the province’s reopening plan after originally being held back due to COVID-19 farm outbreaks, Premier Doug Ford announced Wednesday.

The only exceptions will be the communities of Leamington and Kingsville, which have seen large numbers of cases among migrant workers.

Ford said he has a plan to address the situation on farms, while also allowing COVID-19 positive but asymptomatic workers to continue on the job, with safety protocols in place.

“This is one of (farmers’) busiest times of the year,” Ford said. “They need the extra help and unlike other professions, most of it is outdoors and isolated.”

12:39 p.m.: The four Atlantic provinces have announced plans to ease interprovincial travel restrictions, creating a so-called “bubble” as the region has reported relatively few new COVID-19 infections in recent weeks.

As of July 3, residents of Atlantic Canada will be allowed to travel within the region without having to self-isolate for two weeks when arriving in another province.

Visitors from provinces and territories outside the region will still be required to self-isolate for 14 days and adhere to the local entry requirements in each of the four jurisdictions.

However, once the self-isolation period has passed, these visitors will also be allowed to travel within the Atlantic region.

Each of the four provinces will choose its own process for tracking and monitoring travellers.

The decision to ease travel restrictions was guided by each of the four provinces’ chief medical officers of health, who are asking travellers to adhere to ongoing public health directives.

Read the full story from the Star’s Steve McKinley.

12:27 p.m.: Quebec is reporting 17 new deaths related to the COVID-19 pandemic, including 11 in the last 24 hours. There were also 53 new cases, for a total of 54,937.

There are 500 people in hospital, down 15 from the previous day. Of those, 52 are in intensive care.

The province also announced today it would cease providing daily updates as of Friday, in favour of once-a-week updates every Thursday.

A total of 5,441 people have died from the novel coronavirus in Quebec, and 23,710 have recovered.

12:20 p.m. (updated): Florida’s Department of Health on Wednesday confirmed 5,508 additional cases of COVID-19, setting another daily total record high since the start of the pandemic. The state now has a total of 109,014 confirmed cases.

Previously, the highest daily total of newly confirmed cases was on Saturday, with 4,049 cases. There were also 44 new deaths announced Wednesday, raising the statewide death toll to 3,281.

Less than half of the new cases were in South Florida. It is still unclear if any of the new deaths were in South Florida.

On Tuesday, Miami-Dade hospitalizations hit an all-time high for the second day in a row with 818 patients, according to Miami-Dade County’s “New Normal” dashboard data. According to Tuesday’s data, 108 people were discharged and 114 people were admitted.

While a record number of COVID-19 patients are filling Miami-Dade hospitals, with one medical center in Homestead reaching ICU capacity on Tuesday, hospitals countywide say they still have more beds available than beds filled with COVID-19 patients.

Hospital administrators say there is also a silver lining in the growing number of new cases and hospitalizations in Florida’s hardest-hit county: The patients are younger and not as severely ill as they were during the first wave in April, and doctors and nurses have gained valuable experience in the months-long pandemic — leading to shorter hospital stays and better outcomes.

Scientists are also still working to learn more about the virus, including how many people in the community are infected and have mild or no symptoms, which can make it difficult to determine what percentage of the cases hospitalizations represent.

10:52 a.m.: Ontario has extended its state of emergency to July 15.

Premier Doug Ford has said he is hopeful that will be the last extension of the emergency declaration. The motion passed the legislature this morning.

Many of the emergency orders made under the state of emergency are expected to continue even after July 15, including bans on large gatherings.

After the state of emergency expires, the province won’t be able to make new emergency orders, amend them, or re-enact old ones, but existing ones can be extended.

Local medical officers of health will still have certain powers under the Health Protection and Promotion Act, which is what some have used to require masks in commercial establishments.

Read the full story from the Star’s Rob Ferguson and Robert Benzie.

10:37 a.m.: The Toronto International Film Festival has announced plans for this year’s annual movie marathon, which will include both physical and digital screenings, virtual red carpets and drive-ins.

The festival’s 45th edition is slated to run Sept. 10-19 and has been reimagined to follow the protocols set by authorities to avoid the spread of COVID-19.

Organizers say the 10-day event will have a lineup of 50 new feature films, five programs of shorts and an online industry conference.

It will also have outdoor experiences, press conferences, interactive talks, and Q-and-As with cast and filmmakers.

TIFF didn’t provide specific details on how such events will unfold, but it’s clear this will be a much different festival than the usual extravaganza of hundreds of films and a city crawling with stars, cinephiles and celebrity watchers.

The films include Francis Lee’s “Ammonite,” starring Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan, Halle Berry’s directorial debut “Bruised,” and “Concrete Cowboy” by Ricky Staub, starring Idris Elba, Jharrel Jerome, and Lorraine Toussaint.

10:35 a.m.: The New York City Marathon, the world’s largest marathon and one of the city’s biggest annual spectacles, has been cancelled this year as concerns about the spread of the coronavirus continue to dash hopes of holding large-scale events, organizers announced Wednesday.

The race, one of the most prestigious and lucrative events of its kind, would have celebrated its 50th anniversary in November. It is one of the highlights of fall in New York and on the endurance sports calendar, attracting more than 50,000 runners, 10,000 volunteers and roughly one million fans, who line nearly every accessible yard of the 42.1-km course through the five boroughs.

City officials and New York Road Runners, which owns and organizes the event, decided holding the race would be too risky. Public health experts have said mass events, especially those that bring people together from across the globe, will remain a danger until a treatment or a vaccine for COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, is widely available.

With the announcement, New York became the third of the six major international marathons to be canceled in 2020.

10:30 a.m.: The Toronto International Film Festival will go ahead Sept. 10-19 but will be much smaller, with a lineup of 50 new feature films, five programs of short films, virtual red carpets, press conferences and industry talks. as well as interactive talks.

10 a.m.: The COVID-19 outbreak has sparked “an ugly ticketing pandemic” rife with racial profiling by overzealous enforcement officers, a new Canadian Civil Liberties Association report finds.

In a 37-page study entitled “Stay Off The Grass: COVID-19 and Law Enforcement in Canada,” the rights watchdog calculates 10,000 tickets were issued between April 1 and June 15.

Read the full story from the Star’s Robert Benzie.

8:10 a.m. (updated): Modified ferry service to the Toronto Islands will resume Saturday, Mayor John Tory announced Wednesday morning.

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Ferries will operate at 50 per cent capacity, Tory told reporters at a news conference at Jack Layton Ferry Terminal.

Passengers will be required to bring their own masks and wear them on the boat. Visitors are being urged to buy their ferry tickets in advance online at www.toronto.ca/ferry — only 5,000 tickets a day will be sold.

Passengers are also urged to plan a visit at non-peak hours if possible — 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. are the busiest times.

Only one ferry had been operating during the COVID-19 lockdown, principally for the 700 residents of the islands.

While washrooms on the islands will be open, Centreville Amusement Park and play structures on the islands will remain closed.

Ferry tickets must be purchased ahead of time online and are only valid for the date selected at the time of purchase. Additional staff will be on hand at the ferry terminal to assist visitors with these new requirements.

Read the full story from the Star’s Francine Kopun.

7:28 a.m. Oxford University said testing for coronavirus infection could become quicker and more accurate, following the launch of a multicenter national program of research to evaluate how new diagnostic tests perform in hospitals, general practices and care homes.

The COVID-19 National DiagnOstic Research and Evaluation Platform, or CONDOR, will create a single national route for evaluating new diagnostic tests in hospitals and in community healthcare settings, according to a statement on the university’s website on Tuesday morning.

The research program seeks to bring together experts who are “highly experienced in evaluating diagnostic tests and generating the robust evidence required” for a test to be used in the U.K.’s National Health Service statement.

Jointly led by the University of Oxford and the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, the program will put the many tests developed by the life sciences industry to either detect current coronavirus infection or to find out if someone has previously been infected through their paces in hospital, general practice, and care home environments.

7:26 a.m.: New virus cases declined Wednesday in China and its capital, Beijing, where a roughly two-week spike appears to be firmly on the wane.

A total of 12 cases were reported nationwide, compared to 22 the day before. Beijing had seven cases, down from 13. There were two cases in neighbouring Hebei province and three that were brought in from abroad.

No new deaths were reported and 359 people remained in treatment for COVID-19, with another 118 in monitoring and isolation for testing positive while showing no symptoms or for being suspected cases.

China has reported 4,634 deaths from 83,430 cases since the virus was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

Beijing’s ongoing outbreak has topped 250 cases, virtually all linked to the city’s biggest wholesale market, and led to lockdowns of some neighbourhoods and the closing of recently re-opened schools.

7 a.m.: Sicily’s governor says 28 migrants who were rescued at sea have tested positive for the coronavirus, confirming a new complication in Italy’s efforts to manage waves of migrants smuggled across the Mediterranean from Africa.

The migrants were being held on a ship off Porto Empedocle where they’re taken to quarantine after being rescued.

Sicily Governor Nello Musumeci said in a Facebook post Wednesday that the positive tests confirmed that he was right to demand special at-sea quarantine measures for migrants to prevent new clusters from forming in Italy, the onetime European epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The positive tests come as an Italian parliamentary commission is visiting Porto Empedocle precisely to check on migrant and health care issues.

Summertime has traditionally been peak season for migrant smugglers operating in lawless Libya, and officials have predicted an increase in efforts to reach Europe with the easing of the health emergency in Italy and the resumption of activities of humanitarian rescue ships in the Mediterranean.

6:10 a.m.: You can finally get a haircut, eat at a restaurant patio, or visit malls in Toronto and Peel Region for the first time in 13 weeks on Wednesday as they join the majority of Ontario in entering Stage 2 of the province’s reopening plan.

The province announced Monday that more businesses and services will be allowed to open with appropriate public health measures in place.

Restaurants and bars will be open for delivery, takeout and outdoor dining only, according to the City of Toronto. Shopping malls will be open, but you’ll have to go elsewhere to enjoy the food court as dining spaces will be prohibited.

Personal care services like barber shops, hair styling, nails, tattoos and esthetic services will be allowed to open. Though you will have to hold off on face-related pampering like facials and beard trims a while longer.

Recreational and cultural spaces are also allowed to reopen, including water recreational services like indoor and outdoor swimming pools and splash pads. Community centres will reopen for “a very limited number of modified uses,” the City says, including certain outdoor sports and recreational activities. Campgrounds, museums, galleries, aquariums, zoos and heritage institutions are also reopening. As are libraries with limited on-site services, film and television production, tours and guide services.

6:05 a.m.: New coronavirus cases in the U.S. have surged to their highest level in two months and are now back to where they were at the peak of the outbreak.

The U.S. on Tuesday reported 34,700 new cases of the virus, according to a tally compiled by Johns Hopkins University that was published Wednesday. There have been only two previous days that the U.S. has reported more cases: April 9 and April 24, when a record 36,400 cases were logged.

New cases in the U.S. have been surging for more than a week after trending down for more than six weeks. While early hot spots like New York and New Jersey have seen cases steadily decrease, the virus has been hitting the south and west. Several states on Tuesday set single-day records, including Arizona, California, Mississippi, Nevada and Texas.

Cases were also surging in other parts of the world. India reported a record daily increase of nearly 16,000 new cases. Mexico, where testing rates have been low, also set a record with more than 6,200 new cases.

But China appears to have tamed a new outbreak of the virus in Beijing, once again demonstrating its ability to quickly mobilize vast resources by testing nearly 2.5 million people in 11 days.

Tuesday 7 p.m.: The owner of a farm where some 199 migrant workers have tested positive for COVID-19 says his operation assiduously followed public health guidelines to prevent an outbreak, and has previously been lauded for providing quality accommodation to migrant workers.

In an interview with the Star on Tuesday, Scotlynn Growers president Scott Biddle said the local health department has “always used us as an example for what other farmers should be doing.”

“We’re building housing for another hundred men this year,” Biddle told the Star, adding that the new accommodation will be larger than what’s currently required by Health Canada to account for any changes to federally-mandated housing standards.

The comments come after a Star investigation revealed a history of complaints at Scotlynn by Mexican migrant workers about substandard housing and other concerns.

In reports to the Mexican Ministry of Labour between 2016 and 2018, workers described overcrowded bunkhouses, bedbug infestations, and sometimes failure to receive timely medical attention. Scotlynn received 33 complaints over the two year period, the highest number of any Canadian farm.

On Saturday, 55-year-old father of four Juan López Chaparro, who worked at Scotlynn, died after fighting COVID-19 for three weeks.

Read the full story from Sara Mojtehedzadeh here.

Tuesday 6:50 p.m.: Canada could avoid a second wave of the coronavirus if it learns the lessons of South Korea and Taiwan and attacks testing, tracing and treatment of COVID-19 cases and practices “dynamic distancing” from the get-go, MPs heard Tuesday.

That means as the economy reopens, communities must be ready to reimpose physical distancing and socially restrictive measures periodically with surges in disease activity in order to contain outbreaks and allow economic revitalization to continue, Asaph Young Chun, head of Korea’s Statistics Research Institute, told the Commons health committee.

Those “nonpharmaceutical” interventions are the best “exit strategy” from the COVID-19 lockdowns, he said.

Two American health experts said South Korea and Taiwan showed the path for other countries to follow, but they warned Canada against reopening too quickly even to its neighbours, the United States.

Read the full story from Tonda MacCharles here.

Click here for more news from Tuesday.

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2nd Tennessee Vols basketball player tests positive for coronavirus https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/24/2nd-tennessee-vols-basketball-player-tests-positive-for-coronavirus/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/24/2nd-tennessee-vols-basketball-player-tests-positive-for-coronavirus/#respond Wed, 24 Jun 2020 17:33:25 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=7658 2nd Tennessee Vols basketball player tests positive for coronavirus Video Isolated Rain Threat Through This Evening Video Charleston starts taking down John Calhoun statue Video Appeals court orders dismissal of Michael Flynn prosecution Video Authorities searching for Most Wanted List fugitive sought in Knoxville shooting Video Alexander: Tearing down Andrew Jackson’s statue would be terrible […]

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OU confirms one football player tested positive for COVID-19 https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/19/ou-confirms-one-football-player-tested-positive-for-covid-19/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/19/ou-confirms-one-football-player-tested-positive-for-covid-19/#respond Fri, 19 Jun 2020 11:40:31 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=7505 NORMAN — Oklahoma football coach Lincoln Riley told ESPN’s Mike Golic Jr. and Trey Wingo on Thursday that several OU players have either been exposed or tested positive for COVID-19. That’s not a surprise to him or others. As teams return across the nation for workouts, positive cases among players have been common. Texas announced […]

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NORMAN — Oklahoma football coach Lincoln Riley told ESPN’s Mike Golic Jr. and Trey Wingo on Thursday that several OU players have either been exposed or tested positive for COVID-19.

That’s not a surprise to him or others. As teams return across the nation for workouts, positive cases among players have been common. Texas announced earlier in the day that 13 football players have tested positive.

“Listen, nobody’s been immune to this,” Riley said. “We’ve had a player or two that has either been exposed or tested positive to this thing, like everyone else has. The difference is our players aren’t here together, so they haven’t exposed or potentially infected players here.”

Eventually, as Riley acknowledged, his team must reconvene. OU’s return to voluntary activities on campus begins July 1, with a plan in place for quarantining infected players.

Each player will be required to take an initial COVID-19 test. It’s uncertain how frequently tests will occur after that.

OU chose a later date to return than others as a means of gathering more information about the pandemic.

Riley touted that decision, not to chide other schools’ choices, but because it’s allowed time for more conversations with medical professionals and experts.

“I do feel like we’re more educated (now, than) had we brought our guys in even as little as a week ago; there’s less that we would have known,” Riley said. “So I do feel like we’ve been more educated. Does that mean it’s going be 100 percent? No. But I feel like we’re more prepared on two fronts.”

One of those fronts is general preparation related to the virus. The other, which Riley didn’t expound on, has to do with the civil rights movement taking place in the United States.

“I don’t want to go into a ton of details, but to prepare, with what’s gone on with the racial injustice issue across our country, to prepare and make sure we have the best environment as possible when our guys get back to town as well,” he said.

• Finch charged with felony: Former OU running back Roy Finch was charged with one felony count of assault and battery “resulting in great bodily harm,” according to court documents filed in Cleveland County on Wednesday. OU Daily first reported the news.

According to the Norman Police Department report, the assault occurred Tuesday when Finch allegedly struck the victim in the face, resulting in jaw fractures. Finch is also charged with attempting to interfere with an emergency call. A protective order was filed against him Tuesday.

Finch is awaiting a jury trial in October stemming from assault and battery charges on a police officer in Oklahoma County in April 2018.

From 2010-13 he compiled 1,412 rushing yards and six touchdowns with the Sooners. As a kick returner he tied OU’s longest return with a 100-yard TD against Kansas in 2012.

• Six weeks: Riley has “zero concern” about his team returning July 1 for voluntary workouts, with an extended preseason set to begin weeks later.

The extra two weeks, granted by the NCAA, will allow teams to hold walk-throughs before preseason camps begin.

“I think it’s a good plan,” he told ESPN. “It gives us a little more access to players two weeks before practice. These guys are going to be in good shape. The last two weeks will help us make up for basically missing our entire spring practice period. Barring a bunch of major outbreaks, I think it’s without a doubt enough time to play.”

• QB chatter: Redshirt freshman and former five-star prospect Spencer Rattler has kept pace in the Heisman Trophy odds, despite the fact that OU hasn’t named him its starting quarterback yet.

Asked if he’s already planning a December trip to New York, Riley reminded Golic and Wingo that redshirt sophomore Tanner Mordecai will get his chance at a starting spot.

“This is a different year for us quarterback-wise,” Riley said. “We had Baker Mayfield for three years and had a great run with him. It’s been so many years in a row we’ve had senior quarterbacks (Mayfield, Kyler Murray, Jalen Hurts). We’re excited for the potential of having a quarterback for multiple years.”

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Texas Tech men's basketball confirms positive COVID-19 cases – CollegeBasketballTalk https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/09/texas-tech-mens-basketball-confirms-positive-covid-19-cases-collegebasketballtalk/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/09/texas-tech-mens-basketball-confirms-positive-covid-19-cases-collegebasketballtalk/#respond Tue, 09 Jun 2020 05:20:59 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=7079 The NCAA had a chance to do the right thing on Friday and, in a stunning turn of events, completely missed the mark. Who saw that one coming? The punishment that the Committee on Infractions handed down to Oklahoma State on Friday, a one-year postseason ban to go along with scholarship reductions and myriad recruiting […]

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The NCAA had a chance to do the right thing on Friday and, in a stunning turn of events, completely missed the mark.

Who saw that one coming?

The punishment that the Committee on Infractions handed down to Oklahoma State on Friday, a one-year postseason ban to go along with scholarship reductions and myriad recruiting sanctions, was wrong and should be utterly terrifying for the other programs that found themselves caught up in the FBI’s investigation into college basketball corruption.

Oklahoma State faced a single Level I violation. It was an unethical conduct charge levied at former assistant coach Lamont Evans, who accepted at least $18,150 in bribes from financial advisors in exchange for peddling influence over one player from Oklahoma State and one player from South Carolina, where Evans was coaching before accepting a job on Brad Underwood’s staff in the spring of 2016. Evans was also accused of giving Jeffery Carroll $300.

That’s it.

Evans provided no competitive advantage for Oklahoma State, unless you consider the $300 he paid to Carroll — who was already on the roster and suspended for three games as a result — a competitive advantage. Evans was lining his pockets. He was not doing this to benefit the basketball program. Technically speaking, the players Evans claimed to have the power of persuasion over were the victims of the crimes that got him sentenced to three months in prison on federal bribery charges. He steered them to financial advisors that were willing to shell out bribe money. He knew nothing about the people that he was telling these players to invest their money with. One of the men Evans accepted bribes from was Marty Blazer, who sparked this entire investigation to try and avoid prison when he was caught by the SEC embezzling millions of dollars from clients.

That’s where Evans was guiding players who trusted him.

The players were the victims.

Despite that, Oklahoma State was still hit with a one-year postseason ban. Evans has been gone for three years. Carroll has been gone for two. Neither the current head coach — Mike Boynton — or the head coach the violations were committed under — Brad Underwood — were mentioned in the Notice of Allegations.

“There were no recruiting or other major violations on the part of the institution,” Oklahoma State said in a statement in November. “There are no allegations involving current student-athletes or coaching staff.”

None of that mattered to the Committee on Infractions.

They dropped the hammer on Oklahoma State, effectively neutering what was the most anticipated OSU season since Marcus Smart returned for his sophomore year. So much for seeing Cade Cunningham play in the NCAA tournament. Hell, we may not see Cunningham play for Oklahoma State, period. He was offered the chance to join the G League prospect pathway program, reportedly for as much money as Jalen Green. If he’s not going to play meaningful games at Oklahoma State, maybe he reconsiders the offer.

“Whatever the best option is for him we’re going to support 100 percent without any reservations,” Boynton said.

This gets to the core of the problem when it comes to NCAA enforcement: They far too often punish players and coaches for violations that they took no part in. What did Cunningham, or anyone else on Oklahoma State’s roster, have to do with Lamont Evans accepting bribes from a white collar felon that had been flipped by the FBI? How was anyone associated with the Oklahoma State athletic department supposed to prevent one assistant coach from accepting those bribes?

“A postseason ban for a bunch of kids that were 15, 16 years old when a lot of this was going on? It’s completely, completely out of bounds,” Boynton said.

He’s not wrong.

A postseason ban is total overkill.

That is the most infuriating part is that the NCAA was actually able to punish the man responsible. That’s not usually the case. Evans received a 10-year show-cause penalty from the NCAA in addition to a three month jail sentence for pleading guilty. His coaching career is effectively over. He’ll never be a Division I head coach. He’ll never coach at a level where he is able to earn a couple hundred grand as an assistant. The person entirely at fault for this situation had his life blown up.

And Oklahoma State still got a postseason ban despite the fact that, as Larry Parkinson of the Committee on Infractions said, “the institution fully cooperated from the moment they learned about the circumstances.”

That should be a major red flag for everyone else caught up in this investigation.

USC, Arizona and Auburn all had an assistant coach plead guilty to similar charges as Evans. Louisville committed their violations while they were on probation from the last scandal the program was embroiled in. Oklahoma State faced one Level I violation. Kansas faces five, and they’ve made quite clear they aren’t going to be as cooperative.

If the Committee on Infractions has set the bar here, everyone else better be ready to catch the book that gets thrown at them.

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