15.32°C Vancouver

Nov 20, 2020 3:40 AM -

538 new COVID-19 cases and one death reported in B.C.; Dr. Henry announces new restrictions on social gatherings, travelling and masks

Share On
538-new-covid-19-cases-and-one-death-reported-in-b-c-dr-henry-announces-new-restrictions-social-gatherings-travelling-and-masks
(File) -British Columbia's provincial health officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry giving her views during a press conference. - B.C. government

BC is reporting 538 new cases of COVID-19 with most still coming from the Fraser and Vancouver health regions.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says the province now has 6,929 active cases.

217 people are in hospital, including 59 in intensive care.

Dr. Henry says there is also one addition death, bringing the total to 321.

Details of COVID-19 restrictions in B.C.

B.C. is introducing new far-reaching limits on social gatherings, travel and mandatory masks in response to surging COVID-19 case numbers and record hospitalizations. Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said today that the two-week ban on social gatherings with people outside your immediate household imposed on the Lower Mainland on Nov. 7 will now apply to the entire province and be extended until Dec. 7.

The initial measures were intended to break the chains of transmission in the province's most affected areas. But Henry said COVID-19 transmission linkedto social gatherings has spread into health care, businesses and schools and is now a concern everywhere.

"It has become apparent that this surge in transmission is happening across the province," said Dr. Henry.

"We are seeing increased community transmission and effects on our health-care system in every area.''

Masks will also be mandatory in all public indoor spaces through an order under the Emergency Program Act, said Henry, who resisted mounting public pressure to require masks for nearly eight months. That will include stores and offices, but not schools.

"We need to urgently reduce the level of transmission and our cases across the province," said Henry.

"We need to ensure our health-care system can meet the health needs of all of us in B.C."

Non-essential travel within or outside one's local community is also strongly discouraged, although Henry stopped short of issuing an order to ban it.

"We are in our second surge, and it is proving to be a challenge," said Henry, who last week said the province's contact tracers are reaching their limit.

"We need to relieve the stress on our health-care system, right now."

Under the new mask order, employees and patrons of all public indoor spaces and workplaces will be required to wear a mask in shared public spaces, except when eating or drinking in areas that serve food.

People with disabilities or conditions that make it difficult to put on or remove a mask are exempt, as well as children under two.

Dr. Henry also announced in-person faith and community gatherings of any size are suspended provincewide until Dec. 7.

Gatherings of up to 50 people had previously been allowed.

Weddings and funerals with less than 10 people and no reception, as well as community meetings such as Alcoholics Anonymous or classes that are held in places of worship may still continue with distancing measures and limited numbers.

"We need our faith services more than ever right now, but we need to do them safely," said Dr.Henry.

High-risk group physical activities like indoor spin classes, hot yoga and intensive interval training, which Henry has previously said could continue with enhanced safety measures, are now halted until further notice.

And while indoor and outdoor sports can continue, spectators and inter-region travel are not allowed due to transmission during pre- and post-game mingling.

And businesses are being asked to suspend any returns to the office for employees who've been working at home. The B.C. government had begun requiring some employees to return to offices this month.

"These are the means through which all of us can help flatten the curve and do what we want to do in this pandemic, which is our part," said Health Minister Adrian Dix.

The broad measures to quell the spread of the virus come as the province reported 538 new cases, 309 of which were in the hard-hit Fraser Health region, and a total of 59 outbreaks in health-care facilities.

One more person died in the last 24 hours, and hospitalizations are at a record 217 with 59 people in intensive or critical care.

Two deputy provincial health officers have been delegated from Henry's office to serve as liaisons with schools and WorkSafeBC to ensure exposures are tracked rapidly and safety plans are being followed.

Schools are seeing people exposed to the virus, but very few transmissions.

Dr. Henry said she will be monitoring risks in bars, where it can be difficult to ensure all patrons and staff are following the rules. Shared staff meals at restaurants and workplace socializing have also been linked to community outbreaks.

"The vast majority of businesses across the province are doing a great job," said Henry.

"When rules are followed and safety measures are in place, we don't see transmission of this virus."

B.C. is also planning to hire 950 more contact tracers and 76 community health representatives to do culturally safe contact tracing with the First Nations Health Authority.

More than 700 tracers have already been hired since August.

"We know there are vaccines on the horizon," said Henry.

"But right now, we all need to focus our efforts on slowing the spread and bending our curve back down."

Latest news

BCMay 07, 2026

Police seek public help identifying suspect in Chilliwack bus driver assault

Chilliwack RCMP are asking for the public’s help identifying a suspect connected to an assault on a bus driver earlier this year. According to police, the incident happened March 16 near South Sumas Road and Vedder Road in Chilliwack. Investigators said the suspect was a passenger on the bus and allegedly assaulted the driver, causing injuries. RCMP have not released details about what led to the incident. However, officers said investigators obtained video footage from the area showing a young man leaving the scene after the alleged assault. Police estimate the suspect is between 18 and 19
AlbertaMay 07, 2026

Edmonton expected to see warm temperatures and strong winds into next week

Daytime temperatures in Edmonton are expected to remain between 18 C and 23 C through the rest of this week and into next week, according to weather forecasts. Forecasters say several periods of strong winds are also expected across the region over the next one to two weeks. Environment and Climate Change Canada forecasts stronger wind conditions on Thursday and Friday. Wind speeds could approach 40 kilometres per hour during the afternoon hours. After easing overnight, winds are expected to increase again Friday morning, reaching about 30 km/h. Forecast models suggest conditions may remain re
ottawa-projects-140m-in-savings-from-new-refugee-health-care-co-pay
CanadaMay 07, 2026

Ottawa projects $140M in savings from new refugee health-care co-pay

The federal government says changes to refugee and asylum claimant health coverage introduced this month are expected to reduce public spending by about $140 million this fiscal year. The changes, which took effect May 1 under the Interim Federal Health Program, require refugee claimants and asylum seekers to pay part of the cost for some supplementary and prescription health services. According to federal data tabled in response to an order paper question from NDP MP Heather McPherson, the largest projected savings – about $93 million – are tied to dental care coverage. Under the revised
bjp-sends-defamation-notice-to-punjab-chief-minister-bhagwant-mann
IndiaMay 07, 2026

BJP Sends Defamation Notice to Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann

The Bharatiya Janata Party has issued a legal notice to Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann, alleging defamation over remarks linking the party to recent explosions in Jalandhar and Amritsar. BJP national general secretary Tarun Chugh said the notice accuses the chief minister of making allegations without evidence and seeks action related to criminal defamation, spreading false information, and attempting to incite public unrest. The development follows comments made by Mann a day earlier, in which he alleged that such incidents were being used as political tactics ahead of elections in Punja
india-rejects-csis-allegations-of-foreign-interference-in-canada
CanadaMay 07, 2026

India rejects CSIS allegations of foreign interference in Canada

India has rejected allegations by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) that linked New Delhi to foreign interference activities in Canada, calling the claims “baseless.” Indian Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said India does not interfere in the internal affairs of other countries and described India as a responsible democracy that respects international law and the sovereignty of other nations. Jaiswal said concerns related to such matters should be addressed through established diplomatic channels rather than through public statements or political d

Related News