Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two Surrey, B.C., Schools 'Deep Cleaned' After Contact With COVID-19

09 Mar, 2020 07:15 PM

    SURREY, B.C. - A school district in Metro Vancouver has suspended a community rental program and disinfected two buildings after potential contacts with the novel coronavirus.

     

    In a letter to Serpentine Heights Elementary parents in Surrey, B.C., the school district says its "deep clean protocol" was implemented after health officials confirmed a person who used the gym through the rental program tested positive for the respiratory illness.

     

    Parents at Sullivan Heights Secondary in the same district have also been informed that a member of that school's community has been diagnosed with COVID-19.

     

    The letter does not say if the person is a student or staff member but it says the patient had no symptoms while at Sullivan Heights, so the risk of transmission is considered low for students and staff.

     

    Classes at both schools are going ahead but the school district says its rental program for classrooms and gyms at Serpentine Heights has been postponed until further notice, affecting community groups such as sports teams or scouts and guides.

     

    University Canada West, a private post-secondary institution in Vancouver says classes are going ahead today after the campus was closed last week following word that a person with a presumptive case of COVID-19 had visited the university.

     

    Health officials have since determined there is no risk to faculty or students.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Governor Stephen Poloz Says Bank Of Canada Watching Global Trade Impacts

    Governor Stephen Poloz Says Bank Of Canada Watching Global Trade Impacts
    Governor Stephen Poloz says the bank will be looking to see the extent to which weakness from manufacturing may spread to services, employment, consumer spending or housing.    

    Governor Stephen Poloz Says Bank Of Canada Watching Global Trade Impacts

    Bank Of Canada To Seek Nominations For Who Should Be On The New $5 Bill

    Bank Of Canada To Seek Nominations For Who Should Be On The New $5 Bill
    VANCOUVER - Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz says the central bank is working on plans for a new $5 bill.    

    Bank Of Canada To Seek Nominations For Who Should Be On The New $5 Bill

    Accused Pair Urge Supreme Court To Deny Hearing In Railway Terror Case

    Accused Pair Urge Supreme Court To Deny Hearing In Railway Terror Case
    OTTAWA - Two men found guilty of terrorism offences argue there is no need to revisit an appeal court's decision to order a new trial.

    Accused Pair Urge Supreme Court To Deny Hearing In Railway Terror Case

    Iranian-Canadians Killed In Plane Crash Part Of Growing Diaspora Community

    If there's a sign of how Canada's Iranian diaspora has grown just over the last decade in Canada, consider the story of a festival held in Toronto to mark the Persian New Year, known as Nowruz.    

    Iranian-Canadians Killed In Plane Crash Part Of Growing Diaspora Community

    Questions Surrounding Cause Of Plane Crash Stir Fear, Confusion Among Mourners

    Mounting questions surrounding the circumstances of a plane crash outside Tehran that left no survivors fuelled confusion and fear Thursday among those grieving the deaths of dozens of passengers bound for Canada.

    Questions Surrounding Cause Of Plane Crash Stir Fear, Confusion Among Mourners

    A Look At Some Of The Victims Of The Iran Plane Crash Who Had Roots In Canada

    Dozens of people with ties to Canada were among the 176 who were killed when Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752 crashed after takeoff near Tehran, Iran, on Wednesday.

    A Look At Some Of The Victims Of The Iran Plane Crash Who Had Roots In Canada