Waterloo

  • Posted: February 11th, 2010 - 12:30am by Ben Chapman

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    Ben Chapman

    I used to be an even bigger nerd than I currently am. Spending my time focusing on food safety might be considered by some as sexy (the food pornographers) but while in high school I was into a much weirder and unhip hobby -- I built robots. It's not like I hung out alone in the basement messing around with motors and gears; I built robots on my high school robotics team (I hope that makes it a bit cooler). A couple of us even coined a somewhat embarrassing team name, Team PHYRE (PHYRE stands for Port Hope young robotics engineers).

    The robot building wasn't entirely aimless, we competed against other nerds in an annual national competition, Canada First. Each participating high school was provided with a few materials and tasked with creating a remote control contraption that would be used to play a game against other teams. The game varied from year-to-year but usually involved collecting/shooting/storing and moving balls or pucks into a goal. Fun stuff. We had 8 weeks to build the robot, but the competition weekend was the big pay-off. A bunch of senior high school students staying in a hotel and getting into various levels of trouble. The most embarrassing part of the story is that the competition weekends still rank high on my list of most memorable experiences.

    In a related story, a group of Waterloo region (Ontario) students probably had a memorable extracurricular event weekend recently -- but for more barfblog-worthy reasons. Twenty-five students and two teachers attending DECA, an extracurricular program that gives students hands-on experience in marketing and business, reported symptoms consistient with foodborne illness after the comptetion.

    The students stayed at the Toronto Sheraton Hotel in the city’s downtown, where the competition was held.
    “We’re still in the early fact-finding mode,” said Brenda Miller, the region’s manager of health protection and investigation.
    Public health began investigating on Wednesday (February 11) and has contacted both school boards to find out which schools sent students to the competition and if they have a surge in absenteeism.
    One possibility being looked into is the hotel restaurant where many students ate, although Miller stressed there are other potential sources that must be investigated.
    “It could be norovirus, but at this point it’s too early to tell,” Miller said.

    While there were definitely illnesses associated with the robotics competitions, I'm pretty sure foodborne illness wasn't a likely cause.

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  • Posted: January 26th, 2010 - 10:48pm by Doug Powell

    There are two universities in the Ontario, Canada, town of Waterloo – the University of Waterloo, from whence the Blackberry, and text searching and CCD toys and all sorts of things emerged – and the smaller, business-oriented uni across the street, Wilfrid Laurier, named after the dude on the Canadian $5 bill and former Prime Minister.

    Two students and a staff member at Wilfrid Laurier University are recovering from E. coli poisoning after being treated in hospital, the region’s public health department has confirmed.

    A fourth person, also a student at Laurier, was a “probable case” with symptoms, but no laboratory confirmation.

    Dr. Hsiu-Li Wang, associate medical officer of health for Waterloo Region, said health officials inspected all food preparation areas thoroughly on campus and, “We found no evidence of any potentially unsafe food handling practices.”


    But did they source food from safe sources? Especially the stuff that was going to be served fresh?

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    E. coli  |  0 Comments
    e. coli, Illness, laurier, waterloo