The Standard (St. Catharines)

SHUTDOWN Greyhound ending all service due to virus, putting hundreds out of work and stranding many //

Hundreds out of work after company’s ridership plummets 95 per cent

- COLIN PERKEL THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO—Scores more people in Canada have succumbed to COVID-19, authoritie­s reported Thursday, as one of the country’s major inter-city bus carriers announced it would be shutting down due to a precipitou­s drop in passengers caused by the pandemic.

Of the new deaths, 121 were reported in Quebec, prompting Premier François Legault to delay reopening retail stores, schools and daycares in the Montreal area to May 25.

Nova Scotia recorded three more deaths, all at a long-term care home in Halifax, bringing the Canadian total to above 4,400 as provinces begin easing stay-home restrictio­ns.

However, the transit action by Greyhound Canada will leave people in Central Canada with fewer ways to travel and another 400 employees out of work as of May 13.

Ridership, the company said, had fallen 95 per cent and revenues plunged. With service cut in Western Canada two years ago and several other routes already reduced or suspended due to COVID-19, the company said it was unable to continue without government money.

“This decision came as a last resort option to address the uncontroll­able consequenc­es and devastatin­g impacts of this pandemic,” Stuart Kendrick, senior vice-president, said in a statement. “We will continue our discussion­s with the provincial and federal government­s.”

The closure of bus routes comes along with already drasticall­y reduced commercial air and rail traffic as well as local transit options, leaving cars as one of the few ways to travel any distance.

Across Canada, about 65,000 people are known to have contracted the coronaviru­s. The Canadian Armed Forces have deployed more than 1,000 troops in long-term care facilities and elsewhere, but Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan would not say how many members have fallen ill.

Most of the deployed personnel are in Quebec nursing homes, which have been hit brutally by the pandemic, but some members are at five homes in Ontario. Others are helping out in a variety of tasks in remote and rural areas.

Hospital capacity is of particular concern away from big centres, prompting the country’s chief health officer to advise people to avoid heading to their cottages or second homes. Besides spreading COVID-19 into those areas, Tam said a key issue is the potential for too many people in need of medical treatment in places that simply can’t handle a surge.

In Ontario, for instance, Premier Doug Ford stopped short of telling people to stay away from their secondary properties over the upcoming Victoria Day weekend but urged common sense and respect for health advice.

“It’s not the party weekend it’s been in the past,” Ford said. “I’m asking you — please don’t go up there with a whack of people.”

At his daily briefing, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the federal government would spend $3 billion for wage top-ups for essential workers. The money will go to provinces, which are putting up another $1 billion and will decide who gets extra cash.

Trudeau had previously offered federal wage assistance, particular­ly for personal support workers and other frontline health staff in light of the devastatio­n in long-term care homes, where most of Canada’s more than 4,400 deaths have occurred.

 ?? SEBASTIEN ST-JEAN AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Snowbirds fly over Montreal on Thursday as part of a morale-building tour of Canada called “Operation Inspiratio­n.”
SEBASTIEN ST-JEAN AFP/GETTY IMAGES The Snowbirds fly over Montreal on Thursday as part of a morale-building tour of Canada called “Operation Inspiratio­n.”

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