BREAKING | COVID-19 in Ottawa: Ontario reports another triple-digit case count
Public Health Ontario is reporting another triple-digit increase in new COVID-19 cases in Ottawa.

Public Health Ontario is reporting another triple-digit increase in new COVID-19 cases in Ottawa.
A cloudy sky will hang overhead as Ottawa cleans out from a blast of winter weather.
Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson says recent news that shipments of Pfizer-BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine to Canada would be temporarily cut in half is a setback, but he's still hopeful life in the city can return to a semblance of normality by the summer.
CTVNewsOttawa.ca looks at the top five stories that caught your attention this week.
Ontario Provincial Police say they pulled over a driver whose car was heavily weighed down on Highway 401 and discovered 58 cases of beer.
Victoria Dark did a watercolour painting of her parents' cottage one day on a whim. Now, she has left her government job and her watercolours of homes and buildings in Ottawa are in high demand.
With people ordered to stay at home because of the pandemic, many families are building backyard rinks.
More than 553,000 Canadians have received a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the COVID-19 Canada Open Data Working Group, in a landmark vaccination effort against the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
The town of Beaver Harbour, N.B. is preparing for a huge milestone that’s been 110 years in the making.
A snowmobiler who went missing Jan. 8 was rescued by the Ontario Provincial Police on Jan. 9 near Wawa.
An evening walk took an unwelcome turn for a Winnipeg woman who got locked in a cemetery – much to the amusement of many in the city who rallied behind her calls for some help.
The Ottawa Hospital's CEO says if vaccine supply arrives as planned, the entire city will be vaccinated against COVID-19 by the summer.
There are 144 new COVID-19 cases in Ottawa, according to Ottawa Public Health, as the province set a record for most deaths in a single day.
OCDSB secondary schools plan for return to in-person learning Feb 1, 2021.
The latest on COVID-19 in Ottawa for Friday, Jan. 15, 2021.
Ottawa Public Health says 179 more people in Ottawa have tested positive for COVID-19 following a one-day drop in new cases.
The money from the GoFundMe would be divided among Kanata and Stittsville restaurants.
Ottawa's sledding hills and skating rinks will stay open with a 25-person limit during Ontario's stay-at-home order.
Raymond Léveillé has been taking pictures of outdoor rinks to raise funds for charity but, with Ontario's new stay-at-home order, his work is not considered essential, so his photographic mission is being put on hold.
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a lot of worry for small business owners in Ottawa, but some are figuring out a way to make the best of a bad situation.
Gatineau police say they've handed out nearly 40 tickets so far to people breaking Quebec's provincewide curfew.
As B.C. looks into limiting interprovincial travel, representatives of the province's tourism and hospitality industry are speaking up in opposition.
Officers in the Quebec provincial police's organized crime squad have twice broken up gatherings in January and handed out over $32,000 in fines for violating public health measures to members affiliated with the Hells Angels motorcycle club.
The parents of a 27-year-old Calgary man have been charged following an investigation into alleged neglect.
Ruth Stryzewski has another reason to celebrate ahead of her 109th birthday after recovering from COVID-19.
A man went to great lengths to bring a young deer to safety after it fell through ice.
A Florida waitress says she knew something was wrong when an 11-year-old boy sitting at one of her tables was forbidden from ordering anything to eat.
Tika made her claim to fame with a video of all the outfits she wanted to wear in 2020 but couldn't.
Indigenous music trailblazer Shingoose passed away at 74 from COVID-19.
While critics of Canada's vaccine rollout continue to point to the more accelerated COVID-19 vaccine rollout in the United States, Dr. Anthony Fauci says he isn't planning on American life getting back to some semblance of normality any earlier than Canadian officials are aiming for.
RCMP say they have located a scallop dragger that sank off the coast of southwestern Nova Scotia last month and led to the loss of six fishermen.
Some of Canada’s biggest cities are seeing an exodus of people as urbanites move to bedroom communities, according to a recent Statistics Canada report.
Ontario is reporting a single-day increase in the number of new COVID-19 cases, reporting more than 3,400 new infections and 69 additional deaths.
In his first hours as president, Joe Biden plans to take executive action to roll back some of the most controversial decisions of his predecessor and to address the raging coronavirus pandemic, his incoming chief of staff said Saturday.
Amy's Kitchen is recalling its Golden Lentil Dal Soup because it could cause a serious reaction for people with an egg allergy, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency stated.
Quebec reported Sunday that 242,714 people have now tested positive for COVID-19 in the province, and 9,055 people have died due to the disease since the start of the pandemic. Hospitalizations went down by 14.
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation's former head of counter-intelligence says it fell to him to tell the RCMP about a spy in the Canadian navy, even though the Canadian Security Intelligence Service was already well aware of Jeffrey Delisle's sale of sensitive secrets to the Russians.
There is already a reward for information leading to the person or people responsible for writing 'Trump' on a manatee in Florida, but actor Dave Bautista is taking it a step further, offering an additional US$20,000.
Pfizer announced they're cutting production of their COVID-19 vaccine by 50 per cent for the next month.
As Inauguration Day approaches, D.C. is guarded by more American troops than there are in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Hospitals are seeing a rise in tobogganing and sledding injuries and doctors are warning of the dangers.
Officials in Flint, Mich. have been charged seven years after the city's deadly tainted water crisis.