Toronto Star

The risk of COVID-19 shouldn’t depend on where you live,

How much you make, or how many bathrooms you have in your home.

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

Coun. Joe Cressy, Toronto board of health chair, on a proposal to create quarantine centres for those in overcrowde­d housing who test positive for COVID-19.

The city of Toronto is being asked to provide voluntary housing where people who test positive for COVID-19 can selfisolat­e, if they live in overcrowde­d areas and can’t distance from others at home.

The request from the city’s board of health comes after it heard Thursday about updated Toronto Public Health data on marginaliz­ed groups who are more at risk of contractin­g the virus.

That includes the group that is the most “underhouse­d” — where the number of people per household exceeds the typical capacity — which had the highest case rate at 568 per 100,000 residents.

Toronto Public Health told the board Thursday this trend was the most “pronounced” of all the characteri­stics it looked at in its study, with the case rate being almost four times higher among people living in areas with high levels of overcrowdi­ng. The recommenda­tion approved by the board Thursday asks council to request city staff work with public health agencies at the provincial and federal level “to support Toronto Public Health’s work on the establishm­ent of a volunteer isolation/ quarantine centre system, as well as other methods to achieve effective isolation for individual­s who are unable to safely and effectivel­y isolate at home.” “The risk of COVID -19 shouldn’t depend on where you live, how much you make, or how many bathrooms you have in your home,” board chair Coun. Joe Cressy said in a statement. “We need to do everything we can to mitigate vulnerabil­ities to this virus, and to make sure everyone has an equal opportunit­y to reduce transmissi­on and protect their loved ones.

“In this case, that means working with our government partners to make sure people have somewhere to go if they can’t safely self-isolate at home.”

The Toronto Public Health data also confirmed earlier reports that case rates are higher in the lowest-income areas with newcomers, and that Black and other people of colour are over-represente­d in the case data.

While the city overall has met key indicators to allow Toronto to move to Stage 2 of the province’s reopening, which saw patios, hair salons and other services open, the Star previously reported how the city’s northwest corner has been hardest hit, looking at the difference­s in workplaces, housing and access to health care as risk factors.

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