The Standard (St. Catharines)

BACK TO BUSINESS Ontario will begin to gradually reopen its economy next week

Hot spots in the Greater Toronto Area will be last to have restrictio­ns eased the week of Feb. 22

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Ontario will begin to gradually reopen its economy next week, starting with regions that have fewer COVID-19 cases, The Canadian Press has learned.

Premier Doug Ford is expected to announce Monday that the state of emergency declared last month will be allowed to expire as scheduled on Feb. 9, said a senior government source with knowledge of the decision.

According to the plan, the province will have an “emergency brake” in place to allow the government to quickly move a region into lockdown if it “experience­s a rapid accelerati­on in COVID-19 transmissi­on or if the health-care system becomes overwhelme­d.”

The measure is meant to help deal with the risk posed by new variants of COVID-19, said the source, who was not authorized to speak publicly.

The current stay-at-home order will remain in place in much of the province until each region transition­s back into a colour-coded framework that allows the province to rank health units based on case numbers and trends.

The phased reopening of the economy will start in four regions where transmissi­on of the virus is low.

Health units in Hastings Prince Edward, Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox and Addington, Renfrew County, and Timiskamin­g are expected to move into the least-restrictiv­e green zone on Wednesday, which means restaurant­s and non-essential businesses can reopen.

On the week of Feb. 15, all remaining regions except three hot spots in the Greater Toronto Area are set to move to the framework based on their local case rates. Toronto, Peel Region and York Region are expected to be the last to make that transition on the week of Feb. 22, but the source said an increase in cases could delay that plan.

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