Stage 3 of Ontario's COVID-19 reopening plan looms nearer
Mike Crawley
2 hrs ago
The chances of large parts of
Ontario moving soon to stage 3 of the province's COVID-19 reopening
plan are looking bright as the spread of the coronavirus remains
slow in most public health units.
It's
been nearly three weeks since all of eastern and northern Ontario,
as well as much of the southwestern part of the province, advanced
to stage 2. That allowed the opening of shopping malls, hair
salons, swimming pools, and bar and restaurant patios.
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Data
from those 24 public health units — everywhere but the
Greater Toronto Area, Hamilton, Niagara, Windsor-Essex, Lambton and
Haldimand-Norfolk — show the spread of the virus remains largely
contained.
"We
hope to be able to move into the next stage as soon as
possible," Health Minister Christine Elliott said on
Tuesday.
"It's
looking very good, but we still need another week's data to really
inform the situation, and then decisions will be made about the
opening of stage 3."
More
than half of Ontario's 34 public health units currently have fewer
than 10 active cases (coronavirus cases that are considered to be
still infectious). Fifteen health units have three or fewer active
cases.
The
parts of the province that were first to advance to stage 2 —
including Ottawa, Waterloo Region and London — have a combined
population of nearly 6 million. In these areas, since restrictions
were eased on June 12:
- the combined number of new cases daily has averaged 27, down from a daily average of 34 in the four preceding weeks.
- the number of new cases reported daily has remained below 35 on all but one day
The
trend in the daily number of new cases is the statistic watched
most closely by health officials in determining whether
restrictions can be lifted.
Provincial-level
discussions are currently happening about when to announce stage 3,
Elliott said. She said the decisions to be made include which
parts of the province would move ahead and which measures
would be relaxed.
"We
have to do it safely," Premier Doug Ford said. "We will
do it safely, and we're going to do it in steps as we did before.
We just have to continue seeing the numbers go in the right
direction."
Provincial
officials have said announcements about progressing to the next
stage would be made on Mondays.
An
announcement on stage 3 could come within the next week or so,
according to Dr. Paul Roumeliotis, medical officer of health
for Eastern Ontario. He told a videoconference with reporters on
Tuesday that officials are looking at increasing the maximum size
of gatherings and allowing customers inside restaurants.
The
province has not laid out precisely what changes will come in stage
3 of the reopening. Its general framework released back in April
suggested stage 3 would mean "opening all workplaces
responsibly" and "further relaxing the restrictions on
public gatherings."
Even
with a move to stage 3, mass gatherings such as concerts and
spectator sports events would remain prohibited "for the
foreseeable future," the framework says.
Restrictions
currently in place in stage 2 that could be eased include the
closure of playgrounds, the 10-person limit on social gatherings,
and the ban on indoor seating at restaurants and bars.
While
the daily number of new COVID-19 cases is a crucial metric for
determining the timing of stage 3, the other measures that are
considered include the availability of hospitals beds, speed of
testing, and effectiveness of tracing close contacts of each person
who tests positive.
Some
public health units see mandatory mask usage in indoor public
settings as a key tool in preventing outbreaks and advancing to
stage 3.
"We
want to move to stage 3," Dr. Vera Etches, Ottawa's chief
medical officer of health, said while presenting evidence in favour
of a mask policy during a news briefing on Monday. "We
want all the businesses to be open. We want people to be able to
continue to get back to work."
The
public health unit covering Kingston — which previously had among
the lowest number of COVID-19 cases in the province — ordered
masks to be worn in indoor public places in response to an
outbreak
at a nail salon that is now linked to 27 confirmed cases.
The
ability to prevent and contain local outbreaks will
be one of the province's considerations about whether a public
health unit is ready to move to stage 3, Dr. Chris Mackie, the
London-Middlesex medical officer of health, said.
The
province is "watching the data carefully and not rushing into
a stage 3 reopening, which I think is appropriate," Mackie
said on Tuesday in a news conference.
The
province will take the lead on the decisions about stage 3,
according to Dr. Hsiu-Li Wang, medical officer of health for
the Region of Waterloo, among the first public health units to
advance to stage 2.
"When
we reach stage 3, it is very likely that many of our current heath
measures, such as physical distancing, mask wearing and
hand-washing, will remain in effect," Wang said in a statement
to CBC News.
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