The Peterborough Examiner

Trudeau says he, too, is frustrated by holiday travellers

Pace of vaccine rollout also a concern, PM says

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed his frustratio­n Tuesday as signs pointed to the COVID-19 pandemic taking a dark turn in Canada.

In London, Ont., the morgue was at capacity, a field hospital was opened in Burlington, Ont., Quebec officials were mulling a near-total lockdown and New Brunswick decided to tighten up as well as cases continued to rise at an accelerate­d pace.

Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam noted it took five months for Canada to hit 5 0 0,0 0 0 cases. But now, it is taking just two weeks for

10 0,0 0 0 n ew cases to emerge.

“This evermore-rapid accumulati­on of cases will continue until we can make significan­t progress in interrupti­ng spread, which is why we must all continue our efforts,” she said at a briefing in Ottawa.

While officials said upwards of a million doses of COVID-19 vaccines will arrive by month’s end, the pace at which they’re being administer­ed is only just starting to accelerate.

As vaccines arrive, they are transferre­d to the provinces, which have control over administer­ing the shots to individual recipients.

What more the federal government could do to help is expected to be on the agenda at a meeting between Trudeau and his provincial and territoria­l counterpar­ts Thursday.

“I think all Canadians, including me, are frustrated to see vaccines in freezers and not in people’s arms,” the prime minister said.

Trudeau stressed Tuesday the federal sick-leave benefit, worth up to $1,000, was introduced so Canadians wouldn’t feel pressure to go to work with COVID-19 symptoms, not as a safety net to help people who head out on vacation.

“We didn’t imagine when we passed it unanimousl­y in the House with the support of all parties, that people would use it to pay for their quarantine­s after having gone south for a twoweek vacation,” the prime minister said.

“So that is something we are going to fix right now.”

He also expressed disappoint­ment in federal and provincial politician­s who travelled abroad, despite months of recommenda­tions against non-essential travel.

“As leaders we’ve been encouragin­g and exhorting Canadians to continue to do the right thing,” he said.

“So it is unfortunat­e to see a number of politician­s not take their own advice.”

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Justin Trudeau

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