The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘BRIDGE THE GAP’

Premier Doug Ford looks to extend emergency measures over the next year

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Ontario introduced legislatio­n Tuesday to enable the extension of some pandemic emergency orders over the next year, as Premier Doug Ford denied opposition accusation­s of government overreach during the COVID-19 crisis.

Ford said the legislatio­n would allow the government to extend or amend some emergency orders a month at a time, with the law itself expiring a year after it’s passed.

He said the bill would allow his government to move quickly to extend or change public health measures as the province continues to emerge from the strict lockdown rules it has been under since March.

“I’m dead against big government, I’m dead against the big brother nanny state telling you what to do. That’s just not me,” Ford said at a news conference. “But we have to help the people of Ontario get through this. There’s certain things we have to move on, and we can’t sit around and wait three or four weeks. We have to move in hours.”

Under current legislatio­n, the province can only issue emergency orders while a state of emergency — set to expire July 15 — is in place.

Ford’s office said it would introduce a motion Wednesday to extend the state of emergency until July 24 to ensure there is no gap between that declaratio­n and when the new bill takes effect.

Solicitor general Sylvia Jones said the legislatio­n is needed to “bridge the gap” between the strict measures initially required to flatten the virus curve, and the less stringent conditions needed as case numbers improve.

“It allows us to transition away from the declaratio­n of emergency, which is an important signal to people that we’re on our way out,” she said. “But it also allows us to ensure that ... we still can keep in place the important tools we need.” But NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said Ontarians need more transparen­cy from the government during the pandemic, and the bill will move more important decision-making behind closed doors.

“The government is handing itself a heck of a lot of power for up to two years,” she said. “On the surface, it looks like a pretty big overreach by the government, and it’s troubling.”

Ontario reported 112 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, and two new deaths. The total number of cases stood at 36,060, including 31,603 marked as resolved and 2,691 deaths.

The province also reported 177 newly resolved cases, and 15,100 tests completed over the previous 24 hours.

The number of people in hospital because of the virus increased slightly, while patients in intensive care and on ventilator­s decreased.

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