The Hamilton Spectator

Sick days and business aid needed in hot spots, Peel’s top MD says

‘A lot of the disquiet among businesses’ could be eased with a little help, Dr. Lawrence Loh says

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

TORONTO — Making paid sick days and relief for businesses kick in when regions are placed in certain tiers of Ontario’s pandemic restrictio­ns system could help mitigate a third wave, the top doctor for a COVID-19 hot spot said Tuesday.

Dr. Lawrence Loh, the chief medical officer of health for Peel Region, said resistance to strict public health measures often stems from lack of relief, and that could be addressed in policy.

The province should consider looking at how supports could be part of its restrictio­ns system, he said, suggesting that could help residents better follow pandemic rules.

“If the issue is that you don’t want to do (paid sick leave) on a permanent policy basis, then maybe within a certain zone or within a certain colour, then you actually put that in there. That’s one thing that could be looked at,” Loh said at a discussion hosted by the Ontario Medical Associatio­n.

He noted that “a lot of the disquiet among businesses” that have suffered during shutdowns comes from lack of relief, suggesting that could be brought into the framework on a sliding scale based on the level of restrictio­ns for a community.

The provincial government did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

It has previously said that it isn’t looking to implement its own sick leave policy because some relief is available through a federal benefit.

The Ontario Medical Associatio­n has called on the province to maintain, and in some cases tighten, COVID-19 restrictio­ns in light of more infectious variants spreading in the province.

Associatio­n president Dr. Samantha Hill reiterated the group’s concerns about the variants on Tuesday, saying the more contagious strains need to be considered in the province’s pandemic response.

“The government framework developed last fall was for the original strain. It does not reflect the new variants which ... are more infectious, and that’s a concern,” Hill said.

The group representi­ng physicians has recommende­d banning indoor restaurant dining and other non-masked indoor activities for regions in the red tier of the province’s pandemic system.

Loh and his counterpar­t in Toronto sought to extend strict shutdown measures and a stayat-home order for their regions last week, arguing the spread of variants and recent reopening of schools made it too risky to ease restrictio­ns.

The province granted their request, extending the strictest measures for those two regions, as well as North Bay, until March 8.

The COVID-19 hot spot of York Region, however, saw restrictio­ns ease as it was moved to the red, or second-strictest, tier of the province’s pandemic response system.

The province’s economic reopening began earlier this month. The government has said, however, that it has created an “emergency brake” measure that allows it to swiftly move regions into lockdown if cases spike.

On Tuesday, the Opposition called for the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government to clearly define what would trigger the use of that brake measure.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the government loosened public health restrictio­ns too soon, without a clearly defined plan.

Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca and Green party Leader Mike Schreiner also expressed confusion over the parameters of the measure.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said the measure considers a public health unit’s increase in case numbers, variants of concern and health system capacity.

She argued the brake was used when the province decided last week to keep Toronto, Peel Region and North Bay under the stay-at-home order for two more weeks.

Horwath called that explanatio­n “troubling.”

“It sounds like they’re just making it up as they go along,” she told reporters.

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Premier Doug Ford tours the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research to see COVID-19 research in Toronto Tuesday. He has been asked to define what would trigger “an emergency brake.”
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS Premier Doug Ford tours the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research to see COVID-19 research in Toronto Tuesday. He has been asked to define what would trigger “an emergency brake.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada