Good evening, here are the coronavirus updates you need to know tonight.

Top headlines:

  1. Finance Minister Bill Morneau pays WE organization $41,366 to cover past travel expenses, donated to charity’s COVID-19 efforts
  2. Ontario Premier Doug Ford ousts MPP from caucus for voting against the government’s emergency order bill
  3. Long-term care residents could become casualties of a second wave without federal funding, advocates warn

In Canada, there have been at least 112,204 cases reported. In the last week 3,377 new cases were announced, 41 per cent more than the previous week. There have also been at least 98,125 recoveries and 8,870 deaths. Health officials have administered more than 3,868,358 tests.

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Worldwide, there have been at least 14,947,428 cases confirmed and 616,443 deaths reported.

Sources: Canada data is compiled from government websites, Johns Hopkins and COVID-19 Canada Open Data Working Group; international data is from Johns Hopkins University.


Coronavirus explainers: Updates and essential resourcesCoronavirus in maps and chartsLockdown rules and reopening plans in each province


Photo of the day

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A caravan of protesters join together in front of Senator John Kennedy's office asking for the extension of the US$600 in unemployment benefits to people out of work because of the coronavirus in New Orleans on Wednesday, July 22.

Max Becherer/The Associated Press


Number of the day

53 per cent

Profit at Rogers plunged 53 per cent in its second quarter as revenue fell and bad debt expenses rose.

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The company said the metrics are the result of the pandemic and do not “diminish our long-term growth prospects.”


Coronavirus in Canada


In Ottawa, Finance Minister Bill Morneau told a House committee that he repaid $41,366 to WE in travel expenses for a personal trips he and his family took to Kenya and Ecuador in 2017. Morneau and his wife made two donations of $50,000 to the organization, one of which supported COVID-19 relief efforts in Kenya and Canada.

Also today: Advocates say additional financial support from the federal government is needed to ensure older Canadians are not the primary casualties of a possible second wave. In Canada, 81 per cent of deaths were in long-term care.

And: The federal government is relaxing fingerprinting rules when screening new hires.

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Coronavirus around the world


Coronavirus and business

The parent company of Sobeys will spend $2.1-billion over three years in renovation and expansion efforts, including investing in e-commerce.

Also today: CP Rail posted a better-than-expected profit and raised its dividend by about 15 per cent. The Calgary-based company responded to the pandemic by laying off workers and running longer, heavier trains to squeeze out a profit.

And: Canadian inflation rose 0.7 per cent in June – the biggest increase in the annual inflation rate in nine years. [For subscribers]


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