Edmonton Journal

WITH SOME PROVINCES AHEAD OF OTHERS IN FLATTENING THE CURVE, FEDERAL OFFICIALS ARE URGING NATIONAL COORDINATI­ON WHEN IT COMES TO EASING DISTANCING RESTRICTIO­NS AND REOPENING CANADA’S ECONOMY.

Trudeau calls for national coordinati­on

- BRIAN PLATT National Post bplatt@postmedia.com Twitter.com/btaplatt

OTTAWA • With some provinces well ahead of others in flattening the curve of the COVID-19 pandemic, federal officials are urging national coordinati­on when it comes to easing physical-distancing restrictio­ns and reopening the economy.

Although no provinces have said they plan to imminently jump ahead in lifting restrictio­ns, there is growing talk in some places — particular­ly in Western Canada and Atlantic Canada — that cautious steps can be taken soon. New cases have slowed to a trickle in almost all provinces with smaller population­s, and B.C. released new modelling on Friday that showed they have largely succeeded in flattening the curve and could start to lift some restrictio­ns in May.

Ontario and Quebec, meanwhile, are still seeing large daily increases in new COVID-19 cases and deaths — although even Quebec Premier François Legault has mused recently about reopening schools and daycares.

Most of the physical-distancing restrictio­ns that have crippled Canada’s economy fall under provincial jurisdicti­on, such as school closures and workplace restrictio­ns. The federal government has some direct responsibi­lities, most notably the U.s.-canada border, but it is otherwise limited to providing guidance and recommenda­tions.

Even so, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland and Chief Public Health Officer Theresa Tam all emphasized on Friday that provinces must keep the big picture in mind and coordinate their actions. Trudeau said this was the big topic of conversati­on on the call he had Thursday night with premiers.

“We talked last night about how important it is to be coordinate­d and agreed on the principles and the approaches that we take, while at the same time recognizin­g that the situation in P.E.I. is very different from the situation in Ontario, very different from the situation in B.C.,” he said on Friday morning.

“There will be regional approaches, as there have been all along to the next steps, but we all agreed that we need to continue to remain very, very vigilant as we carefully look at reopening the economy, about relaunchin­g certain sectors in the future.”

Freeland and Tam, speaking at a subsequent news conference, gave a sterner message about reopening.

“Every single Canadian has made a huge sacrifice already in fighting the coronaviru­s,” Freeland said. “That sacrifice is starting to pay off ... What is so essential for us all is not to squander that achievemen­t. We have all paid too high a price already to throw it away. So what I can say on behalf of the federal government is we believe really strongly that we need to be really, really careful, really deliberate, and really thoughtful about next steps.”

Tam said there’s “a different character and intensity of spread depending on where you are in the country,” but said lifting the restrictio­ns now runs the risk of “slipping backwards.”

“Some areas will experience the epidemic slowdown earlier than others, but no matter where we are in the country, we’ve got to remember that Canadians

WE HAVE ALL PAID TOO HIGH A PRICE ALREADY TO THROW IT AWAY.

are highly susceptibl­e to the virus,” she said. “Unless we all remain diligent in maintainin­g our new habits of physical distancing and good hygiene, new outbreaks can be sparked anywhere at any time.”

Provinces where the flow of new daily cases has slowed to less than five are Prince Edward Island, Newfoundla­nd, New Brunswick, Saskatchew­an and Manitoba. They all also have very few or even zero hospitaliz­ed cases, which is a more reliable metric than case counts. (Nova Scotia is an exception, still reporting dozens of new cases a day.)

New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs said this week that his province could start to reopen in May, depending on how the next two weeks go. “It also depends on our ability in the process to follow guidelines that are currently in place so that we don’t see any resurgence,” he said. New Brunswick reported zero new cases on both Thursday and Friday.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO / REUTERS ?? A paramedic transports a patient to Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital on Friday as the number of COVID-19
cases in Ontario continues to grow.
CARLOS OSORIO / REUTERS A paramedic transports a patient to Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital on Friday as the number of COVID-19 cases in Ontario continues to grow.

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