Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Masks will be mandatory at times in B.C. schools

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Aug, 2020 09:39 PM
  • Masks will be mandatory at times in B.C. schools

Staff and students at middle and secondary schools in British Columbia will be required to wear masks on buses and in common areas when classes resume.

The provincial government says masks will also be required whenever students and teachers are outside their learning group and cannot maintain an appropriate physical distance because of COVID-19.

The province says students who can't wear masks for medical reasons will be exempt from the updated health and safety guidelines.

The government says when they are wearing masks, staff and students will still have to maintain a physical distance from people outside of their learning group, which consists of students and staff who remain together through a school quarter, semester or year.

In a news release, the government says it is providing additional funding to schools to help pay for the purchase of up to 1.5 million non-medical masks.

It says the funding would provide for at least two masks for every staff member and student at the province's public schools.

MORE National ARTICLES

Shooting victims' families march for inquiry

Shooting victims' families march for inquiry
Family members of victims were joined by supporters in a march today demanding a public inquiry into the April mass shooting that left 22 people dead in Nova Scotia.

Shooting victims' families march for inquiry

PM must look into complaints about GG: Singh

PM must look into complaints about GG: Singh
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has an obligation to look into allegations that Gov. Gen. Julie Payette mistreated staff members, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says.

PM must look into complaints about GG: Singh

Info czar finds shortcomings at Defence

Info czar finds shortcomings at Defence
The federal information watchdog has identified several shortcomings — from inadequate training to cumbersome paper-based processes — that hamper National Defence's ability to answer formal requests from the public.

Info czar finds shortcomings at Defence

A&W second-quarter sales and profits plunge

A&W second-quarter sales and profits plunge
A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund says COVID-19 took a big bite out of its second-quarter results with same-store sales plunging 31.6 per cent from the prior year.

A&W second-quarter sales and profits plunge

No damage from quakes in B.C., Alaska

No damage from quakes in B.C., Alaska
A moderate earthquake has occurred off northwest Vancouver Island but emergency officials in British Columbia say it has not produced a tsunami.

No damage from quakes in B.C., Alaska

'Chair Girl' fined $2K, given probation

'Chair Girl' fined $2K, given probation
A young woman who made headlines with a toss of a chair from a 45th-storey Toronto balcony was fined $2,000 on Tuesday, with the judge saying it was lucky no one was hurt and that Marcella Zoia had been shamed publicly.

'Chair Girl' fined $2K, given probation