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Five ill in workplace outbreak in Lambton

Lambton Public Health is investigating a COVID-19 outbreak at a workplace.

Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Sudit Ranade would not identify the business where the outbreak is. It is public health’s policy not to provide information that might identify individuals unless there is a broader public health concern.

“One of the things we try to do is not to unintentionally identify people,” he says.
Ranade says two people came in from the same workplace and public health was trying to rule out “other potential exposures.”

As three more people tested positive from the same workplace, Ranade says it became likely the spread was inside the business.

He added public health has to be “reasonably confident the workplace is the likely place of exposure” before declaring an outbreak. Ranade says at least two people have to be ill.

He says none of the people who tested positive in this case have been hospitalized.
As of Tuesday, 327 people have tested positive, up nine cases in one week. There are still 12 people who are ill with COVID-19, 290 have recovered.

High speed internet in Dawn-Euphemia by October

The grain elevator in Shetland will serve as one of seven towers to bring high speed internet to Dawn-Euphemia by October.

The legendary Internet woes of Dawn-Euphemia could be over as early as this month.
And silos scattered across the under serviced area are the key to the plan to bring high speed internet to 90 per cent of the municipality.

The township has been selected to be part of the Rural Ontario Residential Broadband program. The province put up $63 million to help communities with poor internet find solutions to their problems.

Dawn-Euphemia’s internet access has been a constant problem. Residents either pay hundreds of dollars a month for data plans – which still don’t allow for streaming video – or have no access at all.

The problem has been magnified during the pandemic. As the province locked down, it became next to impossible for students and parents to complete their work online in the area. Local school boards compiled notebooks of work for some students in Dawn-Eupehmia because they simply didn’t have access to the internet.

Mayor Al Broad says township council couldn’t hold Zoom meetings because they didn’t have the internet to support video conferencing. Instead, they used the phone.

But a new plan by CENGN, a group that helps small Internet companies get their technologies off the ground, and MPV wifi based out of Thamesville, is about to change all that.

Broad says by October, 90 per cent of the township will have internet speeds of up to 100 megabytes.

Right now, a survey shows most residents have speeds of two or three megabytes.

Broad says the project will see one internet tower built and antennas placed on six grain elevators around the municipality to bounce signals through the usually hard to serve area. MPV specializes in using existing structures, like grain elevators, to bring internet access to rural areas.

Broad says the project is expected to cost about $800,000, with MPV footing half the bill and the rest of the money coming from the province.

“We appreciate the provincial government recognizing the need for broadband services in rural Ontario,” says Broad.

“The digital divide is real and magnified during this COVID-19 global pandemic,” said Infrastructure Minister Laurie Scott in a news release. “We are moving as fast as we can to get people the services that they need.”

Broad says MPV is aiming to have the system up and running by October. Work is already underway in Florence, where fibre optics will go in the ground and where the highest speeds can be expected.

Shetland will also benefit from the highest speeds, however the signal there will be wireless.

A series of antennas will be placed on grain elevators to give service to rural areas. Broad says that will be about 10 megabyte service – three times hirer than most people have now.

“People who are heavily surrounded by trees still could have some issues,” he says. “As much as the technology has improved, it’s not fool proof.”

Packages will range in cost from $50 to $150 per month.

CENGN’s Rick Penwarden hopes the Dawn-Euphemia project will be a solution to other small communities facing the same obstacles in the future.

Sarnia’s mayor will ask county to take another look at mandatory mask bylaw in September

Sarnia Mayor Mike Bradley will ask Lambton county councillors once again to consider a county-wide mandatory mask bylaw.

The mayor, who is also a member of county council, brought the idea forward in July. It was defeated by a vote of 13-4 with many municipal leaders saying the issue should be decided by a province-wide decree or by the individual municipality.

Sarnia council passed a mandatory mask bylaw and it went into effect July 31. Monday, Petrolia passed a similar bylaw which goes into effect Friday.

In an email to councillors, which was also circulated to local media, Bradley says “that leaves the only option, regrettably, under the Rules of Order is to bring a Notice of Reconsideration on the Mandatory Masking Bylaw to the Regular County Council meeting on September 2, which unfortunately is weeks away.

“Lambton County now is the only region/county in the province without a mandatory masking bylaw,” he added.

Bradley hopes to have enough support to deal with the issue at the Sept. 2 county council meeting. It’s also possible for the warden to call a special meeting on the issue.

A county-wide bylaw would likely cover mostly the rural communities, such as Alvinston, Brigden and Florence. By the time September rolls around, Plympton-Wyoming may already have its own mandatory mask bylaw. Council there deals with the issue Wednesday.

St. Clair Township Mayor Steve Arnold says his community will also look at the idea.

Mask up Petrolia; mandatory mask bylaw goes into effect Friday

People in Petrolia will have to wear a mask in public spaces including businesses starting Friday.

Petrolia Council passed a bylaw making masks mandatory for everyone over the age of nine. Medical exemptions will be allowed.

The bylaw includes a fine of up to $1,000 for those who don’t comply, however the town plans to use education before issuing charges.

Only Councillor Ross O’Hara was opposed to the idea. He wears his mask constantly, but the town should not be putting a bylaw in place that they have no intention of enforcing.

He says the town should invest in public education to convince people to wear a mask.

“If we’re not going to enforce it…money could be better spent on education,” says O’Hara. “We should put signs on every corner…there are better ways that we can do this, especially when we’re not going to enforce the bylaw. Bylaws that are not enforced should not be there.”

O’Hara added forcing people to wear masks reinforces the idea that Canadians are over regulated.

Dr. Charles Winegard spoke to council before the debate. He’s the vice president of rural medicine at Bluewater Health and part of the Central Lambton Family Health Team. Winegard doesn’t know of any physician in Lambton who doesn’t support the use of masks. And he says it is best to mandate the use of them. “There is 82 per cent compliance when mandated, which is much different when it was just a suggestion.”

Mayor Brad Loosley was disappointed the province didn’t make a blanket order across the province. The mayor says local doctors are in favour of the move. “I feel theses are the experts and they all recommend masks…if this bylaw helps one individual, it is worth it. And I hope it is temporary.”

Councillor Grant Purdy asked the bylaw be reviewed in three months. He was in favour of a mandatory bylaw saying it would be “catastrophic” if there were a second wave and worried some of the businesses now just hanging on wouldn’t survive it.

He also likened the mandatory order to no smoking bylaws and seat belt use.

Councillor Wade Deighton says he went back and forth on the issue, and wished people would mask up voluntarily. “People should put on a mask in order to protect their neighbours…but we need to really sort of do something here.”

Petrolia becomes the second Lambton community to enact a mandatory mask bylaw. Sarnia enacted a bylaw last Friday. Lambton County councillors turned the idea down in July saying it should be up to individual municipalities. Plympton-Wyoming will look at the issue Wednesday.

Chatham-Kent also passed a mandatory mask bylaw Monday night. It also goes into effect Friday.

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