Toronto Star

Here we close again

Ford moves Toronto, Peel into 28-day ‘lockdown’ as case counts surge, but schools remain open

- ROB FERGUSON AND ROBERT BENZIE

With COVID-19 infections going up, Toronto and Peel Region are locking down.

As Ontario topped 100,000 confirmed coronaviru­s cases, Premier Doug Ford moved Friday to impose the most severe pandemic restrictio­ns since the spring.

The two GTA hot spots will move to a 28-day “lockdown” on Monday morning, prompting concerns there’s nothing to stop residents from going to neighbouri­ng York or Halton regions to get around closures of barber shops, gyms, outdoor dining and more.

Ford called the decision “a difficult but necessary step” after weeks of new highs in COVID-19 cases that threaten to overwhelm hospitals and further endanger nursing homes and schools.

“The situation is extremely serious,” a grim-faced Ford told reporters.

He urged shoppers to “please avoid panic buying right now” in a nod to shortages of toilet paper last March and April.

While schools and child-care centres will remain open, restaurant­s and bars in Toronto and Peel Region will be restricted to takeout food and booze only, with all patios closed.

Similarly, many stores will be permitted to operate only with curbside pickup or delivery.

There are exceptions for supermarke­ts, pharmacies, hardware stores and dollar stores and big box retailers that sell groceries, as well as beer, wine and liquor stores, safety supply stores and convenienc­e stores.

Stores that are allowed to remain open will be limited to 50 per cent capacity, raising the possibilit­y of a return to lineups.

The Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business said the lockdown will be “devastatin­g” to small operators deemed not essential, especially with the Christmas holidays approachin­g.

“That large department stores can be open while small retailers are forced to close during the busiest season of the year is a direct punch in the gut,” it said.

Malls can stay open, but nonessenti­al stores within them must stay closed to customers, although they can offer curbside pickups.

That could lead to “chaos” in parking lots, said NDP deputy leader Sara Singh.

Indoor organized public events and social gatherings will be limited to members of the same household, but seniors will be permitted to have “exclusive, close contact with one other person.”

Outdoor social gatherings will be limited to a maximum of 10 people. The same limit applies to weddings, funerals and religious services, indoors or outdoors, with safe physical distancing.

“I don’t like to use the words ‘bring down the hammer,’ but people have to abide by this,” said Ford, warning that scoff

laws face fines from $750 to $10,000.

Personal care services such as barbers and salons will be closed, as will casinos and bingo halls. Housekeepe­rs and nannies are allowed.

Indoor sports and recreation­al facilities, including pools, will be temporaril­y shut just two weeks after gyms in Toronto and Peel Region were allowed to reopen under increased restrictio­ns.

Opposition parties and doctors said Ford should have acted sooner, given the 1,418 new cases reported Friday and last week’s computer modelling that forecast Ontario could see 6,500 cases a day by mid-December.

“The premier was warned over and over again that this is

where our province was headed, but he cancelled (previous) public health measures too soon,” Singh said.

Dr. Gerald Evans, chair of infectious diseases at Queen’s University and a member of the science table advising the government, said Ford’s move was a week or two late, and that he should extend the restrictio­ns into the new year.

“Opening up just before Christmas just doesn’t make a lot of sense to me,” Evans told the Star from Kingston, saying the lockdown is a much-needed signal to people that “this is getting really bad.”

Ford said Friday that the government is “going to see how it goes after the next four weeks.”

On Friday, Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca called on Ford to

lock down York Region in addition to Peel Region and Toronto, and to impose travel bans from the hot zones after weeks of “dithering half-measures” that allowed COVID-19 to spread rapidly.

York Region has asked to stay out of lockdown, but is pushing the province to impose capacity limits on its malls and stores to prevent thongs of frustrated shoppers from Toronto and Peel Region from flooding in.

“We are hopeful the province will act on our request,” said Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti, who urged residents of Toronto and Peel to stay away from family, friends and stores in York Region.

Ontario’s chief medical officer said residents of areas with higher restrictio­ns should not

to go to areas with lower levels of public health measures, but admitted that the recommenda­tion would be tough to enforce.

“We are going to be trusting and confident the public will do the right thing,” Dr. David Williams told reporters.

Rocco Rossi, president and CEO of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, called for clear directives from all levels of government.

“We have heard clearly from our members with respect to confusing and inconsiste­nt public health guidelines; a lack of testing and tracing capacity, insufficie­nt data on the sources of community spread. and a lack of timely and accessible supports for business” Rossi said.

 ?? TORONTO STAR PHOTO DEPARTMENT ?? This mosaic was created from 92 photos of closed stores on downtown streets. Lockdown will be painful as the holiday season approaches, small businesses say.
TORONTO STAR PHOTO DEPARTMENT This mosaic was created from 92 photos of closed stores on downtown streets. Lockdown will be painful as the holiday season approaches, small businesses say.
 ?? RICK MADONIK TORONTO STAR ?? Personal care services in Toronto and Peel, such as barbers and salons, will be closed for a 28-day lockdown starting Monday.
RICK MADONIK TORONTO STAR Personal care services in Toronto and Peel, such as barbers and salons, will be closed for a 28-day lockdown starting Monday.

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