October 28, 2021

October 28, 2021 5:55 am Published by

October 28th is the 301st day of 2021. There are 64 days remaining until the end of the year.


There were 4 new positive COVID-19 cases reported Wednesday by Chatham-Kent Public Health.

There were 6 resolved cases, the total active case count locally is at 65. Another death locally linked to the virus, a woman in her 30’s has passed away. It’s the 23rd death reported in C-K from COVID19.

There are 321 new cases of COVID-19 in the province.


The Municipality of Chatham-Kent and Councilors are starting to prepare for the 2022 Budget.

The first phase of the budget is community engagement through a survey. How would you like to see your tax dollars spent?

All citizens are invited to complete the survey at LetsTalkChatham-Kent.ca.

Budget deliberations begin January 12th.


Tickets are still available for the Armoury in Lights Monster Fever light show.

The 90 minute drive thru experience runs twice every night until Saturday. One-of-a-kind projection mapping technology and live performances the whole family will love.

Get your carload tickets here.


Imagine driving down the highway on the way to work, and a plane lands on the highway in front of you. That’s what happened in Toronto on Wednesday morning.

A small plane was forced to make an emergency landing on the 407.

Police say that the plane took off from Buttonville Airport and was had to land on the highway in Markham after experiencing difficulty in the air.

The plane managed to land safely, with no injuries, on the highway around 10:50am.


A woman has filed a $5 million lawsuit against Kellogg’s alleging Pop-Tarts don’t have enough strawberries.

The class action lawsuit, filed by a woman in Illinois, alleges the brand’s marketing is “misleading because they give people the impression the fruit filling contains a greater relative and absolute amount of strawberries than it does.”

The woman also alleges that the product’s name, “Frosted Strawberry Toaster Pastries,” is “false, misleading, and deceptive” because the Pop-Tart filling contains a “relatively significant amount of non-strawberry fruit ingredients” including pears and apples. The plaintiff said she wanted more than a “strawberry taste,” which she nevertheless “failed to receive.”

Consumer lawyers don’t believe the Pop Tarts suit will succeed.

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This post was written by Chris McLeod