Medicine Hat News

Why all the rules? Hinshaw, Kenney explain

Top doc, premier host telephone town hall

-

Impassione­d pleas about lifting COVID restrictio­ns were made to Premier Jason Kenney and Dr. Deena Hinshaw in a telephone town hall meeting Wednesday evening.

The president of Alberta Dance Educators described the hardships for that industry and pleaded for a reopening date of March 1.

“This sector is being decimated and is threatenin­g to collapse,” said Irene (no last name given) in the call.

“We have made a dedicated and proven sacrifice to help with the fight against COVID and now it’s time to allow us to resume operations in a safe manner, using our safety protocols that we’ve already establishe­d.”

Irene claims the government’s own figures show low numbers of transmissi­on in her industry.

“With only six cases in the entire province with zero noncohort transmissi­on,” she said.

Kenney says all those involved in making decisions on restrictio­ns are aware of the sacrifices, and in particular­ly for some sectors. He says jurisdicti­ons have had to restrict dance activities because they can be a “significan­t vector of transmissi­on.”

Hinshaw warned against thinking that transmissi­on data rates are accurate. She says challenges with contact tracing means numbers are not a true picture of the cases of transmissi­on, and the decision to close dance studios was because of the potential for close proximity, and therefore transmissi­on.

There were numerous calls about gyms, fitness, tennis, profession­al athletes — even those who need to prepare for the Olympics — yoga studios, casinos and the hospitalit­y industry.

Kenney said, in opening remarks, he believed tourism, hospitalit­y and gyms had been hit the hardest but the government was trying to avoid a “roller coaster” of opening and closing.

He says targets for hospitaliz­ation rates being used as a guide for reopening in stages would not be suddenly changed if numbers started increasing. A weekly average of hospitaliz­ations would be used and government would be looking for a trend over two weeks. If there was sudden, exponentia­l growth then the government would reconsider.

One caller said the government’s financial subsidies to help gym owners were not enough to compensate.

Hinshaw says restrictio­ns on gyms had a lot of do with the exertion through exercise being similar to singing and that posed a greater risk for transmissi­on.

Hinshaw does not consider individual exemptions based on protocols to be an option.

She also says a regional approach to restrictio­ns was not acceptable. In the fall a regional approach had shown that people under strict measures simply travelled to areas where there were fewer rules.

 ??  ?? Deena Hinshaw
Deena Hinshaw
 ??  ?? Jason Kenney
Jason Kenney

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada