There were 11 new cases in the Bubble today: 5 in Nova Scotia, 4 in New Brunswick and 2 in Newfoundland and Labrador.
In NFLD, one of the new cases is travel-related and the other is still under investigation (in the Easter Zone, which encompasses St. John's.
In NB, 3 of the new cases are in the Moncton area and 1 is in the Fredericton area. All are still under investigation.
The NB government has put out an exposure notification for the Main Street Moncton Fit4Less: www2.gnb.ca/content/gnb/en… spanning 06NOV2020 to 12NOV2020.
In NS, all 4 new cases are in the Halifax area: two seem to be school aged children and all are linked to existing cases (if I read the releases right).
NS Public Health has released an exposure notification for GCR Tires in Dartmouth for 13NOV2020: nshealth.ca/news/potential…
In today's press conference, the NS premier and chief medical officer of health both seemed to acknowledge that community spread had returned to the province, as cases not related to travel have been cropping up for a couple of weeks, particularly in Halifax.
A similar pattern seems to be showing up in parts of NB recently (Moncton and Fredericton mainly).
We're starting off, seemingly at a very low base rate of cases compared to the rest of the country. If you ever see my all-provinces graph, the Bubble is basically bottomed-out.
But this isn't because we're special or in any way immune from the pandemic. It's because we've had travel restrictions (the Bubble) and really good compliance with masks and distancing, and great contact tracing that we've staved off outbreaks for so long.
But with there being so many cases in the rest of the country, there was always a decent chance that new cases would land and take hold eventually.
So, what does that look like going forward?
Currently, none of the provincial governments have increased restrictions or changed their alert levels.
PEI has recently mandated masks, but I don't know if that was related to anything in particular.
The attached chart is not a forecast (it does not predict what *will* happen), but it does map out a series of scenarios for the next six weeks.
The scenarios are plausible: the lines past today are just the other provinces' recent growth rates applied to us starting today.
I think if we all do our part, we can beat those scenarios, just like we crushed the first wave and suppressed the outbreaks in Campbellton and Moncton last month.
What we do?
We all know to wear our masks, keep our distancing and avoid crowds. Download the ALERT app if you haven't already.
Here's the big one. Those [indoor, unmasked social gatherings] you like? Start to prioritize them. Which ones are needs and which are wants? Can you cut one this week?
We're not back in March/April, but we are back in May/June and going in the wrong direction.
Small sacrifices now can forestall bigger ones later.
We've beat this before and we'll do it again. 👊
Have a great rest of the week. Look after each other!
Oh, and I forgot. This leaves us with 68 known, active cases inside the Bubble by my count: 32 in NB, 24 in NS, 9 in NFLD, and 3 in PEI.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
There 17 new cases in the Bubble today: 3 in Newfoundland and Labrador, 5 in Nova Scotia, and 9 in New Brunswick.
Of the 3 cases in NFLD, 1 was travel-related,1 is a close-contact of an existing case (there seems to be a cluster of cases in Grand Bank and I'm not sure why they're all interacting with one another), and the last 1 is still under investigation
All of the 5 new cases in NS are in the Halifax area. Two are close contacts of existing cases and three are still under investigation.
The province is introducing new restrictions to slow the spread of the virus, specifically in Halifax.
I'm on lunch break so I'll live-tweet today's NS covid-19 briefing that started six minutes ago at 1:30 as advertised.
Strang walked out. With a grim expression he noted that because of non-compliance with public health measures, they're bringing back the gallows on the waterfront.
McNeil is wearing a a military uniform with a sash for some reason. He's now demanding to be called 'The General'.
Strang intersects to say that the Yarmouth ferry will be used for central quarantine. McNeil grimaced at its mention.
There were 6 new cases reported in the Bubble today: 4 in New Brunswick, 1 in Nova Scotia, and 1 in Newfoundland and Labrador.
The new case in NFLD is a close contact of an existing case.
The new case in NS is in the Halifax area and is still under investigation.
In NB, 1 new cases is in the Saint John area and 3 are in the Moncton area. All are under investigation.
NB has announced that due to increasing case numbers, the Moncton area will be moving back to the Orange alert level (more restrictive). They've modified the restrictions at
There were 10 new cases reported: 2 in Nova Scotia and 8 in New Brunswick.
The two cases in Nova Scotia are both related to a previous case. Public Health has just revealed that both of the new cases are students (one at Graham Creighton Junior High and Auburn Drive High.
These are the first students to test positive in NS since schools re-opened.
The two schools are within walking distance of each other, which makes me think that they're part of a household with an existing case, but that's just me speculating.
There were 7 new cases reported in the Bubble today: 3 in New Brunswick, and 2 each in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Both of the new cases in NFLD are travel-related and isolating.
The three new cases in NB are each in separate zones: one each in Fredericton, Saint John, and Moncton. One is travel-related and the other two are still under investigation (from press releases I've seen, I'm still not clear how the origins are distributed by zone).
For the two new cases in NS, both are linked to existing cases (one is linked to the cluster in Clayton Park). Both are still under investigation, so it's possible we'll get some new exposure alerts tonight.