TORONTO -- For the third time in seven days, Canada has broken its daily record for reported COVID-19 cases as provinces unveil new lockdown measures and officials urge Canadians to take the pandemic seriously.

Canada reported 4,981 new cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, making it the worst day for new infections since the dawn of the crisis. Nearly a third of those infections , which reported its own daily record of 1,575 new cases and 18 deaths.

New modelling suggests that Ontario could soon see by mid-December. If numbers continue to rise, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said he “will not hesitate†to roll out stricter measures.

In Quebec, which reported 1,365 new cases and 42 deaths, the province is to get a hold of the spiralling caseload.

British Columbia reported a record of its own with and four deaths over the past two days. New modelling from B.C. suggests that daily case counts could reach 1,000 per day if people don’t adjust their behaviour.

Alberta announced after public health officials confirmed 860 new cases. The measures, which don’t cover the whole province but are targeted at hard-hit zones, include a two-week ban for all group fitness activities and an 11 p.m. curfew for restaurants and bars. Alberta also instituted a voluntary ban on social gatherings in communities listed on

Manitoba tied a record of its own with as the province rolled out new lockdown measures, including the closure of in-store retail for non-essential businesses.

In Saskatchewan, marking the sixth consecutive day the province has reported more than 100 cases.

One bright spot on the map was Atlantic Canada. Nova Scotia reported and P.E.I. and Newfoundland also reported no new cases. New Brunswick involving travel outside the Atlantic bubble.