The Daily Courier

Party is over in province

B.C. stepping up enforcemen­t with fines promised for party hosts, guests

- By BRENNA OWEN

VANCOUVER — Property owners and organizers can be fined $2,000 for hosting events found in violation of public health orders in British Columbia under stronger enforcemen­t measures announced Friday.

The fines can be levied for hosting a gathering in excess of 50 people, failing to keep the contact informatio­n of everyone who attends an event, or inviting more than five guests into a vacation rental property, Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth told a news conference.

A party with fewer than 50 people is not necessaril­y legal, he added, since all other public health measures must still be followed.

“Police have their discretion, but if you have 38 people crammed into a kitchen and, you know, there’s no social distancing (taking) place, then clearly that’s in violation of the order and the owner would be subject to a $2,000 ticket,” he said.

Farnworth said “problemati­c” guests may also face $200 tickets for behaviour that could include refusing to leave when directed or disregardi­ng COVID-19 safety plans at restaurant­s and other businesses.

B.C. reported 90 new positive tests for COVID-19 on Friday, pushing the number of active cases to 824, including 13 people who are hospitaliz­ed.

And for the second day in a row, two more people in the Fraser Health region died after contractin­g the novel coronaviru­s, bringing the death toll in B.C. to 202.

In a statement, officials said public health workers are monitoring 2,594 people as a result of exposure to known cases of COVID-19, up by 20 from the day before.

There have been 4,915 cases of COVID-19 reported in B.C. so far.

The province is enlisting liquor, cannabis and gaming inspectors, as well as conservati­on officers and WorkSafeBC investigat­ors, to help issue the violation tickets for the duration of the pandemic.

It’s also working with local government­s to revoke business and liquor licences where violations occur, said Farnworth.

“The province is building a comprehens­ive and integrated compliance and enforcemen­t regime to put a halt to bad actors in all corners of B.C.,” he said.

B.C. is taking stronger action because the behaviour of a small minority of “selfish individual­s” is putting vulnerable people at risk across the province, Farnworth said.

“We can’t let the bad decisions made by a few erode the progress that we have made together.”

Deputy provincial health officer Dr. Reka Gustafson said Thursday the majority of the latest cases of COVID-19 are still being detected in younger adults.

Vancouver Coastal Health has launched a campaign in response to that trend, which includes tips for visiting restaurant­s, spending time with friends, playing recreation­al sports, heading to the beach, going on road trips and practising safe sex during the pandemic.

In a release on Friday, the health authority’s chief medical health officer, Dr. Patricia Daly, said the reopening of restaurant­s and bars, where many young adults work, has contribute­d to the rise. But, she said, partying is another factor.

“We’re seeing transmissi­on take place in nightclubs in particular, but also at bars and restaurant­s, while boating and in other indoor social settings,” Daly said in a statement.

“It’s the way people act and interact in these settings that’s problemati­c: sharing food and drinks, speaking loudly and in close proximity if there’s background noise, and not social distancing among strangers, especially if they’ve been drinking alcohol.”

Six new COVID-19 cases were reported overnight in the Interior Health region. The total number of cases in IH since the start of the pandemic is 417.

Seventeen cases are active and on isolation, and no one is in hospital. Within IH, the cases linked to Kelowna since June 26 remains steady at 166. Two are active and in isolation.

The outbreak at Okanagan Correction­al Centre is at seven cases (all staff).

At a COVID-19 briefing in Ottawa on Friday, Health Minister Patty Hajdu said the federal government is also planning to step up messaging aimed at young people next week.

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