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Raptors president Masai Ujiri speaks out after U.S. sheriff deputy drops lawsuit

THE CANADIAN PRESS | posted Tuesday, Feb 16th, 2021

Toronto Raptors president Masai Ujiri is speaking out after a U.S. sheriff deputy dropped a lawsuit against him following a shoving match at the 2019 NBA Finals.

“I am so lucky to have my beautiful, loving, supportive family,” Ujiri said in a statement on Monday. “I’m grateful to the Raptors players, staff and coaches for having my back…You all stood with me.”

Deputy Alan Strickland alleged in a lawsuit filed one year ago that he suffered injuries “which caused and continue to cause great mental, physical, emotional and psychological pain and suffering” after a shoving match with Ujiri.

The incident occurred June 13, after the Raptors won the deciding Game 6 of the 2019 NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors at Oakland’s Oracle Arena. Ujiri went onto the court to join his celebrating team, when Strickland stopped him because the Raptors executive didn’t provide the proper on-court credential, leading to a shoving match that was partially captured on video.

Several bystanders intervened and Ujiri got onto the court without displaying any credentials.

Bodycam footage of the incident that was released appears to support the executive’s claim that Strickland shoved him twice despite Ujiri flashing what looks to be a card attached to his body.

WATCH VIDEO: https://toronto.citynews.ca/2021/02/15/raptors-president-masai-ujiri-speaks-out-after-u-s-sheriff-deputy-drops-lawsuit/

Ujiri says he has decided his fight is no longer a legal one.

“Now the challenge is this: What can we do to stop another man or woman from finding themselves in front of a judge or behind bars because they committed no crime other than being Black?”

“That is the work that each one of us must commit to, every day,” he added.

The Toronto Raptors also shared a video of Ujiri dated August 2020 on their Instagram page, in which he stated “We have to make it better. We have to fight, and we have to stand up, and we have to speak.” He ended by saying “it comes down to human decency.”

https://www.instagram.com/raptors/?utm_source=ig_embed

 

A rural-urban divide: Data gives most detailed look yet at where CERB went

JORDAN PRESS, THE CANADIAN PRESS | posted Tuesday, Feb 16th, 2021

OTTAWA — Kelly Ernst recalls standing on sidewalks, waving to needy families in Calgary’s northeast as they opened their doors to pick up food hampers.

Ernst, vice-president for vulnerable populations at Calgary’s Centre for Newcomers, said the memory speaks to how COVID-19 hurt the community, socially and economically.

Ernst said the Skyview Ranch neighbourhood is one of the most diverse in the country, with a high proportion of visible minorities and newcomers. Residents are often employed in precarious retail jobs or in warehouses, Ernst said. Others work at the city’s airport or in the municipal transit system, both of which were also affected by the pandemic.

“Some of the first people to be laid off during the downturn were people in these precarious jobs,” Ernst said, adding many were left looking for “some way to get through this whole thing.”

Almost seven in every 10 residents over age 15 in Skyview Ranch, received the Canada Emergency Response Benefit in the initial month that the pandemic aid was available, one of the highest concentrations among over 1,600 neighbourhoods The Canadian Press analyzed.

Federal data, obtained through the Access to Information Act, provides the most detailed picture yet of where billions of dollars in emergency aid went last year.

The data is broken down by the first three characters of postal codes, known as “forward sortation areas,” to determine the number of active recipients at any time anywhere in the country.

The Canadian Press used population counts from the 2016 census to calculate what percentage of the population over age 15 in each forward sortation area received the CERB in any four-week pay period.

Some forward sortation areas in the data from Employment and Social Development Canada were created after the 2016 census and weren’t included in the analysis.

Over its lifespan between late March and October of last year, the CERB paid out nearly $82 billion to 8.9 million people whose incomes crashed because they saw their hours slashed or lost their jobs entirely.

Some three million people lost their jobs in March and April as non-essential businesses were ordered closed, and 2.5 million more worked less than half their usual hours.

The data from Employment and Social Development Canada show that 6.5 million people received the $500-a-week CERB during the first four weeks it was available, or more than one in five Canadians over age 15.

What emerges from that initial wave is a largely rural-urban split, with higher proportions of populations relying on the CERB in cities compared to rural parts of the country.

Neighbourhoods in Brampton, Ont., on Toronto’s northwest edge, had the largest volume of CERB recipients with postal-code areas averaging over 15,160 recipients per four-week pay period.

CERB usage also appears higher in urban areas that had higher COVID-19 case counts, which was and remains the case in Calgary’s northeast.

“As cities relied more on accommodations, tourism and food as drivers of economic growth, the more they would have been sideswiped by the pandemic, and larger centres have a higher concentration of jobs in these areas,” said David Macdonald, senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, who has studied the CERB.

“More rural areas of the country and certain cities that have a higher reliance on, say, natural resources wouldn’t have been hit as hard.”

In Skyview Ranch, census data says 12 per cent lived below the poverty line in 2016, and about three in 10 owners and four in 10 renters faced a housing affordability crunch, meaning they spent 30 per cent or more of their incomes on shelter.

Many live in multi-generational households, which the local city councillor said caused additional concerns about students and working adults spreading the virus to grandparents.

“These are real worries and challenges that members of my community have been facing throughout a pandemic,” said Coun. George Chahal.

“The CERB program and the additional support to small businesses was a huge relief for the fear with many folks in my ward.”

The CERB program paid out $500 per week for people whose incomes had fallen to nothing as a result of the pandemic. The federal Liberals amended the program in April to set a monthly income threshold of $1,000.

At the outset, there were 6,520 residents of Skyview Ranch on the CERB, about 69.4 per cent of the population 15 and up.

Then things improved. Businesses reopened and workers were rehired. The decline in the program’s use in Calgary’s northeast mirrored a nationwide drop in recipients overall, even though there were local increases here and there.

In all, there were 4.4 million recipients in the CERB’s second month, the biggest month-to-month change, 3.7 million in the third, and a steady decline to almost 2.3 million recipients by the time the CERB was replaced by a trio of new recovery benefits and a revamped and restarted employment-insurance system.

Over the lifetime of the CERB, the Ontario town of East Gwillimbury had the highest average number of residents accessing the program, at 24 per cent. The town with the lowest percentage was Winkler, Man., at 3.83 per cent.

In Skyview Ranch, the number of recipients in the last month of the CERB stood at 2,440, or about one-quarter of those over age 15.

There is still hardship in Skyview Ranch. The area has seen a spike in COVID-19 cases and incomes have dropped again as restrictions rolled in through December, part of a wider drop in the national labour market.

Chahal said there still is a need in the area for government aid like the federal recovery benefits.

“Maybe not for everybody,” he said, “but there are going to be a lot of folks who are going to be in need of assistance in the upcoming months as we move from this stage of the pandemic (and) into economic recovery.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 15, 2021.

—With files from Lucas Timmons and Meredith Omstead

Jordan Press, The Canadian Press

All residents of Mississauga condo building tested for COVID-19 variant

THE CANADIAN PRESS | posted Tuesday, Feb 16th, 2021

Public health officials are testing all residents of a Mississauga condo building for COVID-19 after five people who live there tested positive for a more contagious variant of the virus.

Peel Public Health says it’s taking the “urgent” step now, while community spread of the B.1.351 variant that first emerged in South Africa is still low.

The agency says it will conduct testing floor-by-floor in the building, which is located on Prince of Wales Drive, in the Confederation Parkway and Rathburn Road West area, on Monday between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Andrew Mitton, who has lived in the building for about three years, said he was a little concerned when he first got the email about the positive cases.

“We got an email yesterday evening, basically notifying us that there was a [COVID-19] variant of concern in the building and that the city would be coming around to do some testing today,” he told CityNews. “That was all that we were told.”

Mitton admitted he didn’t know much about the new variants but he feels relieved that public health came to test so quickly.

“If the variant is concerning the government and health officials as much as it is, then I think it probably is the right thing to do to come in and test everyone in the building and make sure that this isn’t being spread. If one person is positive there’s a likely chance others are.”

When it comes to having the virus in the building he calls home, Mitton said he finds his neighbours and condo staff are taking COVID-19 protocols seriously.

“Our security guards do a tremendous job of keeping things enforced,” he said. “For the most part I think people are pretty diligent about others and keeping others in mind.”

Peel Public Health says residents who were unable to get tested can also attend a testing centre in the community.

Ontario to provide gradual reopening update, more info on regional restrictions

THE CANADIAN PRESS | posted Friday, Feb 12th, 2021

Ontario’s top doctor says the government will announce Friday which categories of its COVID-19 restrictions system some regions will fall into when they begin to reopen next week.

Chief medical officer of health Dr. David Williams has said the decisions will be made based on local virus case rates.

The province began a gradual reopening of its economy Wednesday by lifting the stay-at-home order for three regions with low cases.

The rest of the province, except for three hot spots in the Greater Toronto Area, are set to have the order lifted next week when they transition back to the colour-coded restrictions system.

Toronto, Peel Region and York Region are set to remain under the stay-at-home order until at least Feb. 22.

The government has warned that a sudden spike in cases could delay the reopening of any region in the province.

Senators demand race-based data for medical assistance in dying

JOAN BRYDEN, THE CANADIAN PRESS | posted Friday, Feb 12th, 2021

Senators want the federal government to collect race-based data on who requests and receives medical assistance in dying in Canada.

They approved Thursday an amendment to Bill C-7 requiring the government to collect such data.

The bill would expand access to assisted dying to intolerably suffering individuals who are not near the natural end of their lives.

The amendment reflects concern that Black, racialized and Indigenous people with disabilities, already marginalized and facing systemic discrimination in the health system, could be induced to end their lives prematurely due to poverty and lack of support services.

Sen. Mobina Jaffer, a member of the Independent Senators Group who proposed the amendment, noted that no race-based analysis was done when the bill was being drafted.

“One in four people have been left out of the data collection,” she told the Senate.

Her amendment was widely supported and passed on a voice vote with no objections, other than the government’s representative in the Senate, Sen. Marc Gold, saying that he wanted to abstain.

Sen. Kim Pate, another member of the Independent Senators Group, said the amendment won’t ensure that no one opts for an assisted death as a result of unequal access to health care, housing and social and income supports.

But she said it will ensure that “the government must at least provide some answers about who makes use of Bill C-7 and under what circumstances.”

Pate said the government should also be required to provide more information on who accesses assisted dying, including income, whether they are institutionalized and whether they had access to alternative means of relieving their suffering and to social and financial supports.

Senators burned the midnight oil Thursday night as they continued debating and proposing amendments to the bill.

The extended hours were part of the Senate’s determination to wrap up debate and put C-7 to a final vote by next Wednesday.

The schedule is intended to give the government time to meet the thrice-extended court-imposed deadline of Feb. 26 for bringing the law into compliance with a 2019 Quebec Superior Court ruling.

That ruling struck down a provision that allows access to assisted dying only for intolerably suffering people whose natural deaths are reasonably foreseeable.

Earlier this week, senators approved several substantial amendments to the bill, including one that would allow people who fear losing mental capacity to make advance requests for assisted death and another that would impose an 18-month time limit on the bill’s proposed ban on assisted dying for people suffering solely from mental illnesses.

If senators approve an amended bill next week, it will have to go back to the House of Commons to decide whether to accept or reject the changes and then back to the Senate to decide whether to accept the Commons’ verdict.

March break postponed to week of April 12 for all Ontario schools

THE CANADIAN PRESS | posted Friday, Feb 12th, 2021

Ontario’s education minister has announced March break will be postponed for all schools across the province until the week of April 12.

Stephen Lecce says they are postponing the break to reduce travel and limit opportunities for congregation as concern for variants increases.

He added the decision was made in consultation with public health officials.

“I recognize this is one more change in a year that has been challenging for so many students and our education staff,” Lecce said Thursday. “But it is one made on the best advice of public health officials to keep them safe and to keep our schools open in this province.”

The province’s largest teachers’ union has called on the government to keep March break in place, saying students, families and teachers need the time off.

Schools across Ontario, except those in three Greater Toronto Area hot spots, have resumed in-person learning after a stretch of online classes.

Students in Toronto, Peel Region and York Region return to physical classrooms on Feb. 16.

Top doctors in Toronto and Peel have warned that rolling back other restrictions as students resume in-person learning amid the spread of new virus variants could kick off a worse wave of infections.

The provincial and the federal governments have been urging residents to limit their travel.

The federal government recently introduced its own policies aimed at preventing travel over the spring break. Four major airlines have halted their flights from Canada to Mexico and the Caribbean until the end of April.

The provincial government has also introduced mandatory COVID-19 testing for all international arrivals to Ontario.

WATCH VIDEO:

https://toronto.citynews.ca/2021/02/11/ontario-march-break-schools/

COVID-19 variants expected to be dominant strain in new cases by month’s end

BT Toronto | posted Friday, Feb 12th, 2021

While public health measures have helped curb the cases of COVID-19 and led to a decrease in hospitalizations, variants of the coronavirus are spreading and are expected to increase by the end of the month.

Dr. Adalsteinn Brown, co-chair of the province’s COVID-19 science table, says the latest modelling data shows aggressive vaccination coupled with stay-at-home measures will help the province avoid a third wave and a third lockdown.

Provincial health officials indicate that if public health measures are lifted, cases could rise dramatically depending on the spread of the UK COVID-19 variant, which will soon be the dominant strain in new cases.

Currently, variant strains of the virus account for between five- and 10 per cent of all COVID-19 cases in the province.

“The new variants of concern that spread so much more easily are here and they threaten to undo our progress,” said Brown.

According to the latest provincial data, a total of 239 variants of concern have been recorded to date – 236 of those are the UK variant. The province has also seen cases of the South African variant and recently reported its first case of the Brazilian variant of the virus.

The Ford government’s state of emergency expired on February 9 and the province has begun to ease restrictions to allow businesses to reopen as regions gradually transition back to the colour-coded framework. Stay-at-home orders are expected to remain in effect for Toronto, Peel and York regions until February 22.

Absent any restrictions, the modelling data says Ontario could see almost 2,000 new cases of COVID-19 a day by the end of March with a worst case scenario of almost 18,000 cases a day.

“We are, let me be clear, operating with uncertainty. That is the nature of a new disease with new variants but we need to do as much as we can to reduce that uncertainty. The best bet we can offer from the science this: if we’re able to push the impact of COVID-19 down further by sticking to public health measures and aggressive vaccination we can avoid a third wave and hope for a late spring and summer that is much safer and more open,” said Brown.

The data also reveals that focusing vaccinations on long-term care settings is paying off as the number of daily deaths declines. However, the number of deaths from the second wave is expected to surpass the total number of deaths from the first wave in a matter of days.

While hospitalizations have started to decline, ICU occupancy remains flat. However, an increase in new cases spurred on by the new variants could see ICU numbers climb once again, as early as the second week in March with admissions surpassing 600 by the end of the month.

“In a matter of months, the B.1.1.7. variant went from detection to the dominant strain and as it became the dominant strain cases more than tripled in a month,” Brown said. “At the same time their healthcare system strained with nurses forced to care for four to eight times as many patients as usual and there were daily deaths regularly in excess of 1,000 people. …But there is little room for error in our response to this threat.”

U.S. sheriff deputy drops lawsuit against Raptors’ Masai Ujiri

BT Toronto | posted Thursday, Feb 11th, 2021

A northern California sheriff’s deputy who filed a lawsuit against Toronto Raptors president Masai Ujiri has dropped the court proceeding.

Deputy Alan Strickland alleged in a lawsuit filed one year ago this month that he suffered injuries “which caused and continue to cause great mental, physical, emotional and psychological pain and suffering” after a shoving match with Ujiri.

The incident occurred June 13, after the Raptors won the deciding Game 6 of the 2019 NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors at Oakland’s Oracle Arena. Ujiri went onto the court to join his celebrating team, when Strickland stopped him because the Raptors executive didn’t provide the proper on-court credential, leading to a shoving match that was partially captured on video.

Several bystanders intervened and Ujiri got onto the court without displaying any credentials.

As part of Ujiri’s counter suit, body cam footage of the incident was released that appears to support the executive’s claim that Strickland shoved him twice despite Ujiri flashing what looks to be a card attached to his body.

WATCH VIDEO:

https://toronto.citynews.ca/2021/02/10/u-s-sheriff-deputy-drops-lawsuit-against-raptors-masai-ujiri/

Prosecutors decided in October 2019 not to press criminal charges against Ujiri.

“Masai has been completely vindicated, as we always knew he would be,” read a statement released by Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment. “We are disappointed that he and his family have had to endure the past 18 months of worry and uncertainty, but for their sake we are pleased the legal process has come to an end.”

MLSE added Ujiri would be taking some time to “process the ordeal” before making any public statements.

Strickland and his wife were seeking US$75,000 in general damages, as well as other compensation including punitive damages, lost wages, current and future medical expenses and legal costs as part of their lawsuit. But according to MLSE, “the claims made against Masai and MLSE were dismissed entirely, free of any financial settlement.”

Ujiri called Strickland’s lawsuit “malicious,” and Warriors president Rick Welts apologized to the Raptors executive after video of the incident was widely circulated.

Alameda County Sheriff’s spokesman Ray Kelly said Strickland has since returned to work and has been assigned to administrative duties.

Files from The Canadian Press were used in this report

Business owners join together to demand province reinstates paid sick leave

LAURA CARNEY AND NEWS STAFF | posted Thursday, Feb 11th, 2021

The calls for the province to reinstate paid sick leave are growing louder as a group of business owners joined together to demand the Ford government reinstate them.

The business owners want to see the paid sick leave brought in immediately as they continue to struggle amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

They are also expected to urge the government to pass Bill 239, the “Stay Home if You Are Sick Act.”

The NDP private members bill that has passed first reading would guarantee 10 personal emergency leave days a year for every worker, seven of which are paid days.

It would also allow for 14 more days of paid leave during any infectious disease emergency and provide financial support for small businesses.

The business owners say legislating paid sick leave will help level the playing field for small and mid-sized businesses struggling to compete with bigger corporations.

Last week, Toronto City Council voted in favour of calling on the province to immediately implement 10 days of paid sick leave for workers during the pandemic.

Councillor and Board of Health Chair Joe Cressy says giving those workers paid sick days is desperately needed.

“Those heroes stocking our shelves, delivering our goods, processing our food, those heroes who are keeping our seniors safe, they’re the ones at risk. They’re the ones who are tragically continuing to get sick and in turn transmitting the virus,” said Cressy.

But the premier has said there is no need for it, because the federal government already has the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit. However, critics say the program is flawed and does not provide the same benefit.

Mississauga celebrates “Hurricane” Hazel McCallion ahead of 100th birthday

BT Toronto | posted Thursday, Feb 11th, 2021

A virtual celebration was held Wednesday for Hazel McCallion — Mississauga’s longest-serving mayor — ahead of her 100th birthday on Valentine’s Day.

The video conference celebration was hosted by current mayor Bonnie Crombie and Mississauga city councillors. It also included greetings from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Premier Doug Ford, and Toronto mayor John Tory.

“The City of Mississauga owes a great deal of gratitude for the decades of public service that Hazel has proudly and tirelessly provided the residents of this great city,” said mayor Crombie. “She is a source of inspiration for all of us and is an exemplary role model to women in politics, myself included.”

On November 25, 2020, council approved the renaming of the city’s Central Library to “Hazel McCallion Central Library.” It will close on March 20 to undergo a renovation to modernize the space.

The city along with the Mississauga Library and the Museums of Mississauga posted a virtual exhibit online Wednesday and a special video titled “Hazel A Celebration: 100 Years In The Making,” will be released online on February 14 at 7:30 p.m.

“Hurricane” Hazel served Mississauga as mayor from 1978 to 2014.

Mississauga’s Civic Centre clock tower will be lit red and pink on Sunday in recognition of ‘Hazel McCallion day’ which was officially declared in 2016.