Toronto Star

GTA officials wary of reopening too quickly

Tory urges continued caution as cases not yet showing steady decline

- FRANCINE KOPUN ED TUBB

GTA mayors are urging caution as Premier Doug Ford unveils details of a plan to start reopening the province for business, pointing out that big cities are in a different situation from smaller communitie­s. Ford announced Thursday that beginning next week, stores that are not in malls and have separate streetfron­t entrances will be able to open for business instead of just offering curbside pickup. Seasonal businesses will also be permitted to open, along with pet care and household services like housekeepi­ng, cooking and maintenanc­e.

Ford also lifted the essential workplace limits on constructi­on and allowed some medical services to begin operating again, including in-person counsellin­g and scheduled surgeries.

Golf courses and off-leash dog parks can reopen on Saturday.

Toronto Mayor John Tory and Dr. Eileen de Villa, the city’s medical officer of health, meanwhile urged businesses and residents to exercise caution, to stay home as much as possible and to continue practising social distancing, to avoid flareups of COVID-19.

De Villa asked people to remain at home during the upcoming long weekend, much as they may want to travel on what is typically the launch of cottage season. She said she was making the recommenda­tion to help prevent transmissi­on in smaller communitie­s, where health-care facilities could easily be swamped by an increase in cases.

She also urged people not to get together with friends this weekend, appealing as the idea may be after nine weeks of staying home. “It is not time for that yet,” said de Villa.

“We cannot take our progress for granted.”

Tory warned the coronaviru­s remains a deadly threat and said “we cannot and must not” allow the sacrifices that have already been made to be in vain.

According to the Star’s count, the trend in new COVID-19 cases across Ontario has fallen steadily since peaking at more than 700 a day in late April. However, the overall decline in cases has not been felt equally across the province.

In Toronto — the health unit with by far the most cases and deaths — the daily count of new coronaviru­s cases rose sharply through March to around 200 a day in mid-April, but has plateaued at roughly that level since then. In other words, the trend in new infections has not yet started to fall in Toronto as it has elsewhere.

The number of new cases in Toronto dropped to 153 on Thursday, and more people recovered — 196 — than fell ill, but a consistent and steady decline in cases is needed, de Villa said.

“We must monitor the situation in our city,” she said.

In the rest of the GTA, the daily case count has fallen sharply in recent weeks to about 110 a day, down about half from a mid-April peak.

And in the rest of the province, cases have fallen slowly but steadily to around 75 a day after peaking at nearly three times that rate around April 1 — a much earlier peak than in the Toronto area.

Coun. Joe Cressy, chair of Toronto’s Board of Health, said the continuing presence of community transmissi­on and the unique characteri­stics of big cities make it clear that a GTAspecifi­c approach is needed.

“This is not rocket science — the situation in the GTA is very different than the rest of the province,” he said. “The simple fact is that the GTA is not there yet, and the provincial government needs to ensure an evidence-based regional approach to reopening.”

Other GTA officials have expressed concern with the trend.

In Mississaug­a, Mayor Bonnie Crombie said Wednesday that not every municipali­ty is ready to open, pointing out that infections remain higher in big cities than in outlying areas.

“This is a tale of two pandemics,” she said.

Burlington Mayor Marianne Meed Ward said that people are telling her not to be too gung-ho when it comes to reopening, even though there are only 97 cases in the city of 200,000.

“We need to be cautious in terms of reopening,” said Meed Ward on Thursday, in an interview with CP24.

Tory said he is reassured by the fact that most of the first phase of reopening isn’t scheduled to take place until Tuesday, which gives Toronto time to collect more data in order to determine where the trend of infections is heading.

He said he wants to see clear and understand­able criteria from the province before moving to the second stage of reopening, to make sure it’s done safely.

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