Five years ago, COVID-19 upended life across the world. On March 11 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19 a global pandemic, sending shockwaves across the world and fundamentally altering daily life.
That same day also marked the first COVID-related death in Simcoe County after a senior died of complications after becoming infected. The 77-year-old Barrie man was also Ontario’s first known death linked to the virus.
The news came just hours after Premier Doug Ford declared a state of emergency, effectively banning public events with more than 50 people and forcing the closure of several businesses.
The days and weeks that would follow turned masking, social distancing, sanitizing and isolating into the norm.

As COVID-19 spread, life as we knew it changed rapidly. Governments shuttered schools, limited travel, and forced businesses to rethink how they operate. Long-term care facilities and retirement homes became the epicentres of the crisis.
The Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit worked to contain outbreaks locally, issuing emergency orders and urging residents to stay home while local hospitals braced for an influx of patients.

Now, in 2025, Simcoe County has returned to a sense of normalcy, having long moved past lockdowns and emergency restrictions. Students fill classrooms without masks or distancing required. The businesses that survived the multiple lockdowns and restrictions are open to customers, and tourism in the region is back on track.
COVID-19 remains present today - however, it no longer dominates headlines. Vaccination campaigns have since transitioned to annual booster recommendations for vulnerable populations. Hospitals that were once overwhelmed with COVID-infected patients now focus on dealing with pandemic-driven backlogs.

While daily life has returned to normal, the pandemic left lasting impacts. Many businesses across the region didn’t survive extended lockdowns, while others adapted by shifting to online, changes that continue today. Hybrid work arrangements, once temporary, have become more acceptable.
The effects of the pandemic are still felt in schools, with educators working to address learning gaps caused by disruptions to in-person schooling. Additionally, mental health services, both for students and the general public, remain in high demand, highlighting the impacts of isolation during the pandemic.
The global emergency was lifted in May 2023 as the virus trended downward, and today, health officials continue to monitor new variants of the virus that once defined every day life.
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