National Post

Montreal store openings set back

- Jacqueline Thorpe and Sandrine Rastello

Quebec has been forced to dial back plans for reopening its economy, just six days after the premier announced them.

The high number of COVID-19 cases in Montreal hospitals caused Premier François Legault to postpone store openings by a week in the province’s largest city. Last week he said the city’s retail outlets would be allowed to open May 11; the new date is May 18.

Next door in Ontario, Premier Doug Ford indicated he would continue to take a slow approach to restarting Canada’s biggest provincial economy. Ford said the province is getting close to allowing more retail stores to open for curbside pickup — as long as virus cases continue to decline. He didn’t give a date.

Getting back to business is proving to be no easy task, even as the Canadian economy continues to buckle under the strain of shutdowns. The two neighbouri­ng provinces account for more than 55 per cent of the country’s GDP but have been the epicentre of its virus cases, with 93 per cent of Canada’s deaths as of Monday.

The next dilemma for Quebec is whether to stick to a planned May 19 reopening of primary schools and daycares in Montreal. “It’s out of the question to open and then add to the number of people who could end up in our hospitals, while we have very little room for manoeuvre in Montreal,” Legault told reporters in Quebec City.

Most of Quebec’s 1,772 hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients are in the Montreal region, which has enough beds for now but where the situation is “very tight,” he said.

Quebec’s death tally rose to 2,280 Monday, with 32,623 confirmed cases. Deaths now register 267 per million people, higher than the U. S. at 208 and more than double the rest of Canada at 101, according to Quebec’s public health institute. The problem for both Quebec and Ontario has been severe outbreaks at long- term care facilities, which account for about 80 per cent of fatalities.

Meanwhile, fresh evidence arrived Monday that the economic strain continues to build. Figures showed companies took out loans at the fastest pace since 1981 in March. Employment data due on Friday may show the economy lost more than 4 million jobs in April, a fifth of the labour force and by far the largest decline on record, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.

Still, stores outside of Montreal were allowed to reopen Tuesday with manufactur­ing and constructi­on still planned to restart everywhere in Quebec on May 11.

In Ontario, only a handful of businesses were allowed to reopen Monday, including garden centres offering curbside pickup, automatic car washes and a few more essential constructi­on projects. Ontario has 17,923 cases and 1,300 deaths.

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