The Province

Ottawa wary as provinces loosen rules

PM ‘very worried’ easing of virus restrictio­ns may be moving too quickly for vulnerable communitie­s

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS and TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA — Federal officials stressed the dangers to long-term care residents and Indigenous communitie­s if COVID-19 restrictio­ns are lifted too quickly after projection­s in Quebec painted a dire picture of the potential cost.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Saturday he is “very worried” about residents of Montreal — the epicentre of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada — where the province is preparing to loosen confinemen­t measures despite a rash of fatal outbreaks at nursing homes.

“We must make sure that we are ensuring protection of our older citizens as an absolute priority,” Trudeau told reporters.

“I understand the economic pressures we’re all under and I understand people do want to go outside. But we need to do it in ways that we are sure are going to keep people safe, because the last thing that people want is a few weeks from now (is) being told, ‘OK, we loosened the rules and now COVID’s spreading again and you’re all going to have go inside for the rest of the summer.”’

The comments came less than 24 hours after Quebec’s public health institute said deaths could soar to 150 a day in the greater Montreal area if physical distancing measures are lifted. New cases could mushroom to 10,000 by June amid a potential surge in hospitaliz­ations.

Premier Francois Legault said last week that elementary schools, daycares and retail stores with outdoor entrances in Montreal can reopen May 25 — the second time he has pushed back the date, but ahead of other large cities.

Federal officials remain concerned about a rising death toll.

“I’m afraid of more people dying and more outbreaks,” said Dr. Howard Njoo, the country’s deputy chief public health officer.

Long-term care residents account for more than 80 per cent of deaths caused by the virus across Canada despite making up only one in five cases, chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said Saturday.

Stricter measures “may have to be reinstated” if controls ease up too soon, she said, calling the impact on seniors “a national tragedy.”

“The virus has not disappeare­d from the face of the Earth,” Tam said.

Questions about access to supplies are emerging among other vulnerable population­s as health officials and community leaders work to contain the spread of COVID-19 in Saskatchew­an’s far north.

The region has seen a spike in cases in and around the remote Dene village of La Loche, a community of 2,800 about 600 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon where an outbreak has affected more than 100 residents.

Leonard Montgrand, the regional representa­tive of Metis Nation-Saskatchew­an, said Friday the situation is getting scary because infrastruc­ture isn’t set up to respond to the crisis.

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller said outbreaks of COVID-19 in First Nations communitie­s may have been delayed because of their remoteness, but the government needs to remain vigilant in the future.

“You could see languages disappear,” he said, referring to elders who make up the last generation to speak some Indigenous dialects.

NDP MP Nikki Ashton criticized Miller after the government sent medical tents to the First Nations community of Pukatawaga­n in northern Manitoba that “weren’t requested,” calling the move “paternalis­tic.”

Canada’s case count climbed past 67,000 on Saturday. Quebecers make up more than half of the total cases, with 36,986 — about half of which are in Montreal.

On top of sustained community transmissi­on in pockets of the city, long-term care homes have come under such strain that 1,350 Canadian Forces soldiers will be deployed to 25 facilities by mid-May to help residents, the federal government says.

“They’re dying in indignity in vast numbers. And that will continue if there are measures that are relaxed too soon. That is the scientific conclusion,” Miller said.

The news Saturday was a bit better in Ontario, where Premier Doug Ford announced provincial parks will reopen Monday after one of the lowest daily case counts in recent weeks — 346 new confirmed cases for a total of 19,944, including 1,599 deaths.

 ?? CHRIS HELGREN/REUTERS ?? A customer browses at Sheridan Nurseries in Toronto on Friday, the first day garden centres reopened in Ontario as the province moves to ease COVID-19 rules. Ontario’s provincial parks are set to reopen Monday.
CHRIS HELGREN/REUTERS A customer browses at Sheridan Nurseries in Toronto on Friday, the first day garden centres reopened in Ontario as the province moves to ease COVID-19 rules. Ontario’s provincial parks are set to reopen Monday.

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