The Peterborough Examiner

Provinces set to ease restrictio­ns on Monday

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA—Provinces across the country are set to begin easing COVID-19 restrictio­ns on Monday following a weekend in which thousands more cases of the respirator­y illness were identified, hundreds more were reported dead and a much-ballyhooed made-in-Canada testing kit was recalled.

Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchew­an are among those set to take another step out of lockdown by allowing the resumption of some economic and social activities that have been halted for more than a month due to the pandemic.

Ontario and Quebec aren’t going as far.

Ontario is allowing a small number of mostly seasonal businesses to reopen while Quebec is easing the lockdown on most retail stores outside the Montreal area, which has been hit hard by COVID-19 over the past month and a half.

Yet unlike the other provinces, Quebec’s plan to begin reopening comes as the province has shown little progress in curbing the illness’s spread, with another 1,800 positive cases and 183 deaths from the disease reported over the weekend.

Quebec Premier François Legault has previously defended plans to start reopening, noting most of the province’s deaths have been in long-term-care homes and arguing the fight against COVID-19 is entirely different in those facilities.

Quebec officials also added more than 1,300 cases to April’s count, saying those numbers weren’t originally included because of a technical problem. The province accounts for more than half of the Canadian cases of COVID-19, which includes more than 3,680 deaths.

Legault did not hold a briefing on Sunday, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other federal government officials sidesteppe­d questions in Ottawa about the province’s plan to begin reopening even as more cases continue to be reported.

Those plans also include unlocking elementary schools and daycares across Quebec on May 11.

“Different regions will have different measures to bring in at different times and our job is to make sure we’re supporting them as best we can as we go through this carefully and step by step,” Trudeau said during his daily COVID-19 update.

That federal support includes obtaining enough protective equipment for workers as provinces open more segments of their economies, helping increase testing capacity and supporting research into COVID-19.

It was in that vein that Trudeau announced $175 million in federal funding to a Vancouver biotech company, AbCellera Biologics Inc., which the prime minister says has identified antibodies that could be used to create treatments or a vaccine.

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