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A church pastor arrested last month and charged with violating COVID-19 rules on maximum gathering capacity will remain behind bars until the trial begins in early May, a Canadian judge has ruled.
The Edmonton Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Peter Michalyshyn ruled Friday that Pastor James Coates of GraceLife Church must remain in jail until his trial, scheduled to take place from May 3 to May 5, in Alberta Provincial Court in Stony Plain.
Pastor Coates was detained at the Edmonton Remand Centre on Feb. 16. He has refused to agree to bail conditions that he does not attend or conduct services at GraceLife Church unless they comply with government guidelines requiring capacity limits and social distancing.
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OK, maybe we’ll just huff and puff a lot.
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Try refreshing your browser, or GUNTER: The provincial government is undermining its own rules by permitting GraceLife Church to flout the law Back to video
That pretty much sums up the provincial government’s approach to GraceLife Church, the Evangelical congregation in Parkland County just west of Edmonton’s city limits.
For the sixth straight week since being ordered closed in late January after repeatedly violating COVID-19 restrictions, GraceLife held a packed service again this past Sunday.
A video stream of the service seemed to show a far higher occupancy than the 15 per cent currently allowed by public health rules. The full parking lot outside the church seemed to confirm overcrowding indoors, too.
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For far too many seniors in Ontario, the pandemic proved to be a death sentence.
The virulent COVID virus has cost 3,748 seniors their lives one of them my sweet, gentle dad, who succumbed to the virus, along with 14 others, when it ripped through his dementia facility during October’s second wave.
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Try refreshing your browser, or LEVY: An annus horribilus for those in long-term care homes Back to video
Both my brother and I got to bid him a tearful goodbye in his hospital room. Others were not so lucky, forced to forever live with the reality that their loved ones died alone, due to strict visitation rules in some hospitals and long-term care (LTC) homes.
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