Toronto Star

Ontario puts home renovation­s on hold

Contractor­s can continue on projects started before Tuesday, province says

- ANITA BALAKRISHN­AN

Ontario homeowners who haven’t started work on their renovation projects as of Tuesday will have to put their plans on hold under the province’s new constructi­on rules.

The rules are part of tightened COVID-19 restrictio­ns filed Wednesday in the Reopening Ontario Act, after Ontario entered a state of emergency to try and prevent hospitals from being overwhelme­d by the pandemic.

Those regulation­s say contractor­s can continue renovation­s to residentia­l properties and constructi­on work started before Tuesday — but the rules won’t allow new renovation projects to start for at least 28 days.

While sending workers into an occupied home raises concerns, Ontario Constructi­on Consortium executive director Phil Gillies said the industry has a good track record so far.

New rules won’t allow new renovation projects to start for at least 28 days

Amid safety concerns during the first wave of the pandemic, Gillies’s think-tank called for constructi­on sites to be shut down after a constructi­on worker started an online petition describing crowds of up to 100 workers without running water at some job sites.

While Gillies said he is still watching carefully and urging stringent cleaning of job sites, he added that the relatively small portion of constructi­onrelated COVID-19 complaints to the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board shows that contractor­s and unions have stepped up to protect workers and tenants. Less than one per cent of the more than 10,000 COVID-19-related WSIB claims allowed so far are in constructi­on.

“But this is no time to be complacent,” Gillies said. “If you have tradespeop­le in your home — keep your distance and wear a mask.”

Dave Wilkes, chief executive of the Building Industry and Land Developmen­t Associatio­n, said the regulation­s on renovation­s and repairs ensure that people will not be left with a half-torn-down kitchen or washroom as more people work or go to school at home.

Wilkes said his organizati­on, at minimum, asks home occupants and work crews to fill out symptom and travel questionna­ires and requires designated wash stations for jobs longer than two days. Crews wear masks and log their schedules for contact tracing, Wilkes said, and extra communicat­ion with homeowners and occupants is done by phone or video.

Trades groups like carpenters and drywallers are scheduled to work separately to keep people distanced, Wilkes said, and there are also cleaning requiremen­ts for renovation­s as part of “specific protocols that are in place to protect both the homeowner, but also the contractor.”

Wilkes said the provincial rules should hopefully prevent people from being stuck “between” homes due to unfinished renovation­s. But the halt on new renovation­s does come amid a business boom for the sector.

Wilkes said that even as work continues on existing renovation­s and repairs, the clampdown on new renovation projects will cause the growing sector to slip behind its current level of economic strength. But, Wilkes said, each sector must do its part to help stem the spread of COVID-19.

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