Medicine Hat News

Canadians rush to prepare their wills amid ongoing COVID-19 uncertaint­y

- LORI EWING

TORONTO

Nadine Parker couldn’t have guessed that she’d be writing her will at the age of 32.

But four months pregnant with identical twins and married to a nurse, Parker said the growing COVID-19 pandemic has them both confrontin­g their mortality.

The grim task of preparing for death was necessary. The talk with her husband, she said, was tough.

“It was honest, it was raw,” said Parker, noting they both drafted wills.

“And it was scary at the same time too, because it’s not something that you ever sit down and actually talk about with one another.”

The new coronaviru­s that has spread rapidly throughout Canada appears to have led to a sharp demand for wills.

Erin Bury, CEO of the Toronto-based online service Willful, said her business has been busy ever since March 12 - the day after actor Tom Hanks announced he had tested positive for coronaviru­s and the day after the NBA shut down.

“The first eight days of April compared to the first few days of March, it’s been a 620 per cent increase in sales, and 450 per cent increase in traffic,” Bury said.

This time last month, “nobody was really concerned about it, everyone was still in the mindset of, ‘Oh, it’s just the flu.”’

The Ontario government removed one of the big barriers to writing wills last week when it issued an emergency order to allow virtual witnessing of wills and powers of attorney through online video platforms.

While other provinces offer more flexibilit­y, Ontario’s laws required in-person witnessing of both wills and powers of attorney by two people, who are neither a beneficiar­y nor a spouse of a beneficiar­y.

“That’s been the biggest question that we’ve gotten from seniors, is: ‘How can I actually get this executed?’ Not just the documents created, but executed during COVID?” Bury said.

“And the best answer we had (before the emergency order) was ‘Well, wear gloves and make sure you respect the sixfeet rule.’ Virtual witnessing ... is the biggest advancemen­t in estate law in a long time and something that will make it a lot easier for people to get this done during COVID.”

However, Ontario’s Ministry of the Attorney General still needs to provide more informatio­n on how virtual witnessing can be executed, Bury said on Monday. Her company is waiting for clarity on what methods should be employed in order to ensure the documents are legally binding.

COVID-19 causes mild or moderate symptoms for most people, but for some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness or death.

Sonya Northeast, a 34-yearold mom of two, is considered high risk for COVID-19 after almost dying of streptococ­cus pneumonia a couple of years ago.

“My illness kind of came out of the blue and I thought, ‘Oh my God, what if I had actually died?’ All my money would have been locked up by the government for years, there’s going to be legal fees that (my family) would have had to pay out of pocket,” Northeast said.

“That hit me like a nice big brick wall. I had been one of those people who put it off - I’m not older, I didn’t think about (a will). But you never know.”

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